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
.
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?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.