24

Currently I have to write the following to update an element already contained in a Set:

Set mySet= ...
Element e1 = new Element (...);
....
....
Element e2 = new Element (...);
\\e1 and e2 are different instances, but equals.

\\update the element contained into the Set
if (mySet.contains(e2)){
    mySet.remove(e2);
    myset.add(e2);
 }

That doesnt look nice. Is there an alternative ?

5
  • 2
    Is the type of element such that two instances of the type are "equal" as far as the equal() method is concerned but are not "equal" in some other way that is important to the program? Apr 14, 2010 at 10:54
  • 1
    the element in the add statement is another than in the contains and remove statement? Apr 14, 2010 at 11:01
  • @Martijn Courteaux: Even if the same instance is used in those three function calls, there could be a different instance that is stored in the set and is "equal to" element. It seems that the OP wants to replace the instance currently in the set with a different, "equal" instance. I would say that the reason that there is not a method to do what is desired is because that is not the typical--or arguably suggested--use of Set. Apr 14, 2010 at 11:06
  • question edited to answer comments above.
    – Eleco
    Apr 14, 2010 at 11:20
  • I avoided needing to replace objects altogether by adding the updates to a new set before the old objects. stackoverflow.com/a/48740040/728602 Feb 12, 2018 at 5:32

5 Answers 5

18

A Set is a data structure made to avoid duplicate by mean of using equals() on the object; that also means that two object that are equals() to each other are considered to be perfectly equivalent. Ie, whether you use the version already in the Set or the new one, your code should work the same.

If you want to update the object with a new value, then this is clearly not the case for you (the two version can not replace each other), and you should then use another data structure (eg, a Map, where you can easily override the value, in this case, the key can even be the object itself).

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    yes. I realize now that my definition of equals() was too imprecise - leading to some objects being more equals than others ;)
    – Eleco
    Apr 14, 2010 at 12:45
  • I don't think that an equals() method gives you an ability to assume two equal objects are perfectly equivalent (certain equiv. relations have to be satisfied but that's about it). And vice versa (that's evident from the default impl. in the Object class). So yes, if two objects are perfectly equivalent then replacing them might not make sense. In other cases, different rules may apply. Jan 24, 2019 at 12:29
5

Why is no replace() method defined on the Set interface?

I can think of three reasons:

  1. It is functionally redundant: set.replace(old, nu) is simply if (set.remove(old)) { set.add(nu) } for example.

  2. The behavior in the case where old is not present adds complications.

  3. Adding replace to the Set API forces all implementations of Set to implement a (redundant) method.

It may even be that there are deeper reasons; e.g. to do with the implementability of replace in some obscure case.

However, as others have pointed your use case does not require a replace at all. Your code has the same effect (*) as this:

    Set myset = ...
    myset.add(element);

(* Actually, you might be able to detect a difference if your element.equals(Object) method compares element objects field by field. Depending on the Set implementation, you might get different object references in the sets after executing the two code sequences. But, IMO you'd be asking for trouble if you made assumptions about that kind of thing!)

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    This would be not redundant. For example, some optimization can be added, especially (but not at last) with sorted sets. This method missed not because redundancy, but because "need for replacing" is very uncommon. Oct 25, 2015 at 0:24
  • It is functionally redundant.
    – Stephen C
    Oct 25, 2015 at 0:40
1

No need to remove and then add. Just modify the object directly. Since Sets (or any collection) just store the reference, you don't need a replace() method.

EDIT : the above statement is INCORRECT. See http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/Map.html

Note: great care must be exercised if mutable objects are used as map keys. The behavior of a map is not specified if the value of an object is changed in a manner that affects equals comparisons while the object is a key in the map

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    Modifying an object that's in a Set (especially a HashSet) is a dangerous operation. And if the modification changes the results of the equals() and hashCode() methods of that object, then it's just plain wrong and is begging for all kinds of bugs. Apr 14, 2010 at 10:59
  • @Joachim - Point taken. Here's the official line from javadocs - "Note: great care must be exercised if mutable objects are used as map keys. The behavior of a map is not specified if the value of an object is changed in a manner that affects equals comparisons while the object is a key in the map" Apr 14, 2010 at 11:16
1

I think the alternative is just use add.

From the docs:

Adds the specified element to this set if it is not already present (optional operation). More formally, adds the specified element e to this set if the set contains no element e2 such that (e==null ? e2==null : e.equals(e2)). If this set already contains the element, the call leaves the set unchanged and returns false.

However, I can't really tell from your question if you are trying to update or replace an element. When you change an element's the property, those changes are automatically reflected in the Set because the Set contains references, so no update isn't really needed. If your trying to replace a different element, such a replace method would be redundant as explained by Stephen C.

(after question edit)

e1 and e2 are different instances, but equals.

I suggest that you implement equality on Element. That way, the add method checks the existence of an element not by reference (the default Object.equals) but by your notion of equality on Element. So even if the references of e1 and e2 are different, e1.equals(e2) == true.

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    this doesn't update the old equivalent object with the new object
    – Progman
    Apr 14, 2010 at 10:50
  • Remember that your object needs to be override equals and hashCode for the Set to be able to identify if they are truly the same object. Apr 14, 2010 at 11:02
  • @Shervin: That's wrong. The Set API documentation clearly states that equality checks are based on the equals method. Specific Set implementations (e.g. HashSet) may have an additional requirement that hashCode must match as well, but that is not a general requirement for Set usage.
    – jarnbjo
    Apr 14, 2010 at 11:46
  • 1
    @jarnbjo: The contract of hashCode() requires it to be consistent with equals() ( java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/… )and since every class extends Object every class is bound to that contract. So your class must (almost always) implement hashCode() when it implements equals(). Whether or not a Set implementation actually depends on that contract is a different question altogether. Apr 14, 2010 at 12:23
  • @Joachim Sauer: Thanks. I was about to comment @jarnbjo saying the same thing. Apr 14, 2010 at 18:06
0

by definition a set cannot contain an element more than once, so your contains->remove->add thing is pointless. just add your item as many time as you want to the set.

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