8

I want to convert one string array to list with specific range. In my case I always want from index 1 to last index. I don't need the index 0 value included in the list. Is there any direct method that I can use to filter and convert to the list as I need ?

public class test1 {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String[] optArr = {"start", "map1", "map2", "map3"};
        List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr).collect(Collectors.toList());
        System.out.println(list);
    }
}
  • 1
    ArrayList class have a subList method, which can be used to slice the list. – raviraja yesterday
  • 1
    Aside: rename your class/variables to follow proper naming conventions and have meaningful names. e.g. ArrayToListConversionTest is also a better name – nullpointer yesterday
  • Basically all answers until now (except for the answer by TongChen ) are wasting time and space. (Literally - I mean, here on the site, as well as when they are implemented). Imagine having a List with 10 Million elements, and you just want to omit the first one. Creating a stream and collecting it to a new list is O(n) in time and space. The answer that uses Arrays.asList(optArr).subList(1,optArr.length) is an elegant, concise one-liner, with O(1) in time and space. – Marco13 16 hours ago
10

You can use Stream.skip():

List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr).skip(1).collect(Collectors.toList());
  • the only challenge with skip would be selecting initial elements instead of skipping – nullpointer yesterday
  • 2
    @nullpointer I think we can all safely agree that for the given use case, your answer is the superior one. Have an upvote. – Robby Cornelissen yesterday
1

Looking at your data you might consider :

List<String> list = Stream.of(optArr).filter(s -> s.startsWith("map")).collect(toList());

But if you just want to filter the first index sublist is the way to go. You do not need to use stream wherever you can.

  • 1
    not content based, but index based – nullpointer yesterday
1

Why do you need to use streams? Why isn't some ancient magic like for-loops enough for the task?

String[] optArr = {"start", "map1", "map2", "map3"};
final List<String> list = new ArrayList<>();

for (int i = 1; i < optArr.length; i++) // skip first element
    list.add(optArr[i]);

The simplest tool for the job.

1

You can also use Arrays.copyOfRange to copy an array.

Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero and original.length, inclusive.

public static <T> T[] copyOfRange(T[] original, int from, int to)

And then convert into List

List<String> result = Arrays.asList(Arrays.copyOfRange(optArr, 1, optArr.length));

IntStream : one other way by using IntStream

List<String> result = IntStream.range(1, optArr.length).mapToObj(i->optArr[i]).collect(Collectors.toList());
14

You can also use the overloaded method Arrays.stream​(T[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive) as :

List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr, 1, optArr.length)
                          .collect(Collectors.toList());

Returns a sequential Stream with the specified range of the specified array as its source.


Alternatively(non Java-8), using the subList is an option, but I would prefer chaining it in one-line instead of creating a new object as:

List<String> list = Arrays.asList(optArr).subList(1, optArr.length);
  • 5
    asList + subList has the advantage of not having to allocate a whole new list. The array is used as as backing storage for the list instead of being copied. – John Kugelman 17 hours ago
1

It should be like this.

List<String> al = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(optArr));
List actualList = list.subList(1, al.size());
2

One method use List.sublist(int,int)

List<String> list = Arrays.asList(optArr).subList(1,optArr.length);
System.out.println(list);

Second method use Stream

List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr)
    .skip(1)
    .collect(Collectors.toList());
System.out.println(list);
  • The first one should likely be the solution. O(1) time and space, in contrast to basically all other answers here. – Marco13 16 hours ago
3

One non Java 8 option might be to just create a view on top of your current list which omits the first element:

List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr).collect(Collectors.toList());
List<String> viewList = list.subList(1, list.size());

This would mean though that the underlying data structure is still the original list, but one extra element in memory does not seem like a big penalty.

  • @nullpointer Um...I am suggesting to just run the original stream, and then view it however you want. – Tim Biegeleisen yesterday
  • Why create a new list with streams, and not just Arrays.asList(optArr)? – Marco13 15 hours ago
1
List<String> list = Arrays.stream(optArr).skip(1).collect(Collectors.toList());

I think it must work.

See docs here : https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/stream/Stream.html

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