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Is there an utility method in Java that generates a list or array of a specified length with all elements equal to a specified value (e.g ["foo", "foo", "foo", "foo", "foo"])?

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5 Answers 5

232

You can use Collections.nCopies. Note that this copies the reference to the given object, not the object itself. If you're working with strings, it won't matter because they're immutable anyway.

List<String> list = Collections.nCopies(5, "foo");
System.out.println(list);
[foo, foo, foo, foo, foo]
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  • 2
    flawless answer!
    – Gaurav
    Nov 20, 2020 at 3:18
  • 1
    note - this returns an immutable collection
    – Gaurav
    May 18, 2022 at 7:14
  • note - this will evaluate "foo" even if n = 0
    – darw
    Jun 7, 2022 at 13:49
37

For an array you can use Arrays.fill(Object[] a, Object val)

String[] strArray = new String[10];
Arrays.fill(strArray, "foo");

and if you need a list, just use

List<String> asList = Arrays.asList(strArray);

Then I have to use two lines: String[] strArray = new String[5]; Arrays.fill(strArray, "foo");. Is there a one-line solution?

You can use Collections.nCopies(5, "foo") as a one-line solution to get a list :

List<String> strArray = Collections.nCopies(5, "foo");

or combine it with toArray to get an array.

String[] strArray = Collections.nCopies(5, "foo").toArray(new String[5]);
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  • 1
    Then I have to use two lines: String[] strArray = new String[5]; Arrays.fill(strArray, "foo");. Is there a one-line solution?
    – laurt
    Oct 10, 2014 at 12:39
  • 1
    Very simple: Collections.nCopies(5, "foo") Thkns! Oct 10, 2017 at 14:14
20

If your object are not immutable or not reference-transparent, you can use

Stream.generate(YourClass::new).limit(<count>)

and collect it to list

.collect(Collectors.toList())

or to array

.toArray(YourClass[]::new)
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Version you can use for primitive arrays(Java 8):

DoubleStream.generate(() -> 123.42).limit(777).toArray(); // returns array of 777 123.42 double vals

Note that it returns double[], not Double[]

Works for IntegerStream, DoubleStream, LongStream

UPD

and for string dups you can use:

Stream.generate(() -> "value").limit(400).toArray()

No extra libs required, single line

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Using IntStream, you can generate a range of integers, map them to the element you want and collect it as a list.

List<String> list = IntStream.rangeClosed(0, 5)
            .mapToObj(i -> "foo")
            .collect(Collectors.toList());

Or, as an array

 String[] arr = IntStream.rangeClosed(0, 5)
            .mapToObj(i -> "foo")
            .toArray(String[]::new);
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  • 1
    works flawlessly
    – Gaurav
    May 18, 2022 at 7:02

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