4

This question is just for fun.

I have this method:

private static String getBaseDomain(String fullDomain) {
    // we take the base domain from the usual xxx.yyy.basedomain.tld: we 
    // want only the last 2 elements: basedomain.tld
    List<String> elements = Arrays.asList(fullDomain.split("\\."));
    if( elements.size() > 2){
        elements = elements.subList(elements.size()-2, elements.size());
    }
    return String.join(".", elements);
}

And I'm wondering how to get the same result using the java stream API (actually, I'm wondering which method would be the most resource-efficient).

I can't figure how to get only the last 2 elements from a stream: limit(2) will give me the first two, and for skip(XXX) I don't know how to extract the size of the stream "inline".

Can you tell me how you would do?

1
  • I suggest to use some kind of fold with queue as accumulator and remove element from it when it reach certain size.
    – talex
    Oct 19, 2016 at 15:44

4 Answers 4

7

You could use skip:

elements.stream().skip(elements.size() - 2)

From the API:

Returns a stream consisting of the remaining elements of this stream after discarding the first n elements of the stream. If this stream contains fewer than n elements then an empty stream will be returned.

Probably useless example:

// a list made of a, b, c and d
List<String> l = Arrays.asList("a", "b", "c", "d");

// prints c and d
l.stream().skip(l.size() - 2).forEach(System.out::println);

Probably useless note:

As mentioned by a few, this only works if you have a size to work with, i.e. if you're streaming from a collection.

Quoting Nicolas, a stream doesn't have a size.

10
  • If elements is Stream you can't do that. Because you use it twice.
    – talex
    Oct 19, 2016 at 15:45
  • @talex oh, yes typo - fixed - elements is a List here.
    – Mena
    Oct 19, 2016 at 15:46
  • Please note that this only works with a collection not with any Stream since a Stream doesn't have size Oct 19, 2016 at 15:59
  • 1
    @NicolasFilotto absolutely. But I assume the use case here is to stream from a collection, see OP's scenario.
    – Mena
    Oct 19, 2016 at 16:03
  • 2
    Probably the worst application of the double-curly-brace anti-pattern ever. How about List<String> l = Arrays.asList("a", "b", "c", "d");? Or if it has to be an ArrayList: List<String> l = new ArrayList<>(); Collections.addAll(l, "a", "b", "c", "d");
    – Holger
    Oct 19, 2016 at 18:13
2

You could do a bit of inlining of your original approach, which I think shortens it up nicely, and you don't even have to use a stream:

    String[] a = fullDomain.split("\\.");
    return String.join(".", Arrays.asList(a)
                                  .subList(Math.max(0, a.length-2), a.length));

If you really want to use a stream, you can use the array-subrange stream source:

    String[] a = fullDomain.split("\\.");
    return Arrays.stream(a, Math.max(0, a.length-2), a.length)
                 .collect(Collectors.joining("."));

If all you have is a stream, whose size you don't have in advance, I'd just dump the elements into an ArrayDeque:

    final int N = 2;
    Stream<String> str = ... ;

    Deque<String> deque = new ArrayDeque<>(N);
    str.forEachOrdered(s -> {
        if (deque.size() == N) deque.removeFirst();
        deque.addLast(s);
    });
    return String.join(".", deque);

Of course, this isn't as general as writing a collector, but for simple cases it's probably just fine.

1

If it is an indexed collection you could use

IntStream.range(elements.size() - 2, elements.size()).mapToObj(elements::get).forEach(System.out::print);
1

If elements is a stream, you can write a custom collector to keep just the last K elements (there may well be a collector like this already):

List<?> lastK = ints.stream().collect(
    Collector.of(
        LinkedList::new,
        (listA, el) -> {
            listA.add(el);
            if (listA.size() > K) {
              listA.remove(0);
            }
        },
        (listA, listB) -> {
            while (listB.size() < K && !listA.isEmpty()) {
              listB.addFirst(listA.removeLast());
            }
            return listB;
        }));
1
  • 2
    You could even use an ArrayDeque instead of LinkedList improving the performance of the accumulate and merge function, but at the expense of needing an ArrayList::new finisher if the result type has to be a List.
    – Holger
    Oct 19, 2016 at 18:42

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.