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Why does Guava's ImmutableList have so many overloaded of() methods?

Looking at Guava's ImmutableList (and some other classes), you'll find plenty of overloaded of convenience methods ("Returns an immutable list containing the given elements, in order.") that take a different number of parameters:

...
public static <E> ImmutableList<E> of(E e1, E e2, E e3) 
public static <E> ImmutableList<E> of(E e1, E e2, E e3, E e4) 
public static <E> ImmutableList<E> of(E e1, E e2, E e3, E e4, E e5) 
... 

All the way to this one:

public static <E> ImmutableList<E> of(E e1,
                                      E e2,
                                      E e3,
                                      E e4,
                                      E e5,
                                      E e6,
                                      E e7,
                                      E e8,
                                      E e9,
                                      E e10,
                                      E e11,
                                      E e12,
                                      E... others) 

Some colleagues of mine consider this silly, wondering why there's isn't just one method: of(E... elements). They suspect it's an ill-guided performance "optimisation" that falls into the category "do you think you're smarter than compiler", or something like that.

My hunch is that Kevin Bourrillion et al. put these methods in there for a real reason. Can anyone explain (or speculate) what that reason might be?

6
  • If the library were older I would suspect the methods were written pre Java 5.0. The original code might be that old and it hasn't been refactored. Nov 30, 2010 at 14:44
  • @Peter: Never mind the fact that it would break backwards compatibility to remove them (the code would be linked against a method which no longer exists), which they may not want. Though they could at least be deprecated were that so. Nov 30, 2010 at 14:57
  • @Mark, ironically, it is the of(E[]) builder which is deprecated. ;) Nov 30, 2010 at 14:59
  • 1
    @Peter: of(E[]) is deprecated in favor of the more descriptive copyOf(E[]) I believe. And I don't think there's anything in Guava that uses a pre-1.5 style.
    – ColinD
    Nov 30, 2010 at 15:13
  • 8
    "Some colleagues of mine consider this silly..." I smiled, because no one finds it sillier than we who actually DID it. :) Dec 2, 2010 at 1:43

5 Answers 5

10

The comment in the source says:

// These go up to eleven. After that, you just get the varargs form, and
// whatever warnings might come along with it. :(

So, this was done because varargs methods produce a warning with generic arguments.

3

I think it's to avoid unchecked generic array creation warning when E is a generic type.

1
  • 1
    I'm not sure if this was the reason, but it's certainly a relevant consideration. It's stupid, but currently in Java you get this warning when you call a varargs method using a generic type, which is ridiculous since as the caller you can never interact with the array created by invoking the method via varargs. I believe either Java 7 or 8 will introduce a change to move the warning to the method declaration instead. Nov 30, 2010 at 14:53
0

It's to avoid the overhead of creating a varargs array for the most common use cases. This is modeled after the way EnumSet.of(..) was designed.

2
  • 3
    I can't be so, because these methods call the same vararg method internally.
    – axtavt
    Nov 30, 2010 at 14:51
  • There is a chapter talking about that in Effective Java, but I don't seem to be able to find it on the internet. Nov 30, 2010 at 14:56
-1

Actaully the compiler is really dumb, the JVM has most of the smarts, but its still not smart enough to eliminate the need to create an array for a vararg.

Whether saving the array is really worth it, is perhaps something the author didn't want users to worry about. i.e. he might know it doesn't make much difference, but not all users might realise its not worth worrying about it 99% of the time.

When it was google-collections this was part of the description "High-performance immutable implementations of the standard collection types, for example ImmutableSet"

1
  • 2
    Vararg parameters are arrays, so of course it isn't possible to not create an array for a varargs argument. Anyway, ImmutableList constructs the varargs array internally for all of these overloads (with the exception of the single-element list).
    – ColinD
    Nov 30, 2010 at 16:27
-1

What I can think of is to avoid confusion by the compiler.

If we had only,

public static ImmutableList<E> of(E element); //Option 1

and

public static ImmutableList<E> of(E... elements);  //Option 2

and in your code we had

ImmutableList<String> list = ImmutableList.of("Value");

The compiler wouldn't know whether to call option 1 or option 2.

There must be a valid reason why Josh Bloch, Kevin Bourrillion and his team thought of having "ridiculous" of(...) method.

2
  • The compiler will use the most specific method matching the call... in this case, Option 1.
    – ColinD
    Nov 30, 2010 at 16:24
  • Plus, if that were all that was needed, it would just take an overload like of(E, E, E...).
    – ColinD
    Nov 30, 2010 at 16:30

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