Collector.toList()
will return an empty List for you.
Here is the implementation:
public static <T>
Collector<T, ?, List<T>> toList() {
return new CollectorImpl<>((Supplier<List<T>>) ArrayList::new, List::add,
(left, right) -> { left.addAll(right); return left; },
CH_ID);
}
As you can see ArrayList::new
is being used as a container for your items.
From JavaDoc of Collector:
A mutable reduction operation that
accumulates input elements into a mutable result container, optionally
transforming the accumulated result into a final representation after
all input elements have been processed. Reduction operations can be
performed either sequentially or in parallel.
A Collector is specified by four functions that work together to
accumulate entries into a mutable result container, and optionally
perform a final transform on the result. They are:
And
A sequential implementation of a reduction using a collector would
create a single result container using the supplier function, and
invoke the accumulator function once for each input element. A
parallel implementation would partition the input, create a result
container for each partition, accumulate the contents of each
partition into a subresult for that partition, and then use the
combiner function to merge the subresults into a combined result.
So as long as you don't do weird things like combine function return null
, the Collector
always return at least a mutable container
using your provided supplier
function.
And I think it's very counter-intuitive if an implementation would ever return null
container.