41

Why doesn't a stream.count() return an int?

I understand that I can easily convert the long to an int by casting,

return (int) players.stream().filter(Player::isActive).count();

but why would a java stream.count() return a long instead of an int?

3
  • 11
    Why should it return an int if you can easily convert from a small-enough long to int, but not from an overflown int back to long?
    – tobias_k
    Jun 20, 2017 at 19:05
  • 5
    When you dealing with stream, normally it would be something that very very big hence the reason for streaming. Converting long into an int will lose percision if the number is big.
    – Minh Kieu
    Jun 20, 2017 at 19:05
  • 3
    because long is longer than int
    – ACV
    Jun 21, 2017 at 0:06

3 Answers 3

23

When Java came out in early 1996, common PCs had 8 to 16 Mb of memory. Since both arrays and collections were closely tied to memory size, using int to represent element counts seemed natural, because it was sufficient to address an array of ints that is 4Gb in size - a size gigantic even for hard drives in 1996, let alone RAM. Hence, using long instead of int for collection sizes would seem wasteful at the time.

Although int size may be a limiting factor at times, Java designers cannot change it to long, because it would be a breaking change.

Unlike Java collections, streams could have potentially unlimited number of elements, and they carry no compatibility considerations. Therefore, using long with its wider range of values seems like a very reasonable choice.

1
  • Some Java collections can also contain a potentially unlimited number of elements (like LinkedList) even though their size will be reported wrong.
    – ooxi
    Jun 25, 2017 at 19:45
23

This statement

players.stream().filter(Player::isActive).count(); 

is equivalent to:

players.stream().filter(Player::isActive).collect(Collectors.counting());

This still returns a long because Collectors.counting() is implemented as

reducing(0L, e -> 1L, Long::sum)

Returning an int can be accomplished with the following:

players.stream().filter(Player::isActive).collect(Collectors.reducing(0, e -> 1, Integer::sum));

This form can be used in groupingBy statement

Map<Player, Integer> playerCount = players.stream().filter(Player::isActive).collect(Collectors.groupingBy(Function.identity(), Collectors.reducing(0, e -> 1, Integer::sum)));
1
  • I see a problem when I use .count(); instead of .collect(Collectors.counting());. It does a simple count without processing business logic
    – user14734781
    Apr 18, 2021 at 17:45
22

Well simply because it's the biggest 64-bit primitive value that java has. The other way would be two counts:

countLong/countInt

and that would look really weird.

int fits in a long, but not the other way around. Anything you want to do with int you can fit in a long, so why the need to provide both?

1
  • 2
    What if I want to save memory ? Ex. Count the number of characters in a long string, knowing that each character will never occur more than Integer.MAX. It would be a waste of memory to use Long instead of Integer in this case.
    – MasterJoe
    Jul 29, 2020 at 19:51

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