How is IntStream
, DoubleStream
, or LongStream
better than regular stream in Java 8?
Do these threads have high performance or maybe usability?
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How is IntStream
, DoubleStream
, or LongStream
better than regular stream in Java 8?
Do these threads have high performance or maybe usability?
Stream<Integer>
etc. have to work with boxed values (Integer
instead of primitive int
) which takes significantly more memory and usually a lot of boxing/unboxing operations (depending on your code). Why only Int/Double/Long
? Just because they were expected to be used most often.
Same applies to OptionalInt
and friends and all the functional interfaces.
For collections (lists/maps/sets) there are many third-party libraries providing primitive specialization for the same reason. Really the problem there is even more acute because with streams you don't (usually; sorted()
is a counter-example) need to store many values in memory.
IntStream
and alike, you have summaryStatistics()
, which gives you easy access to statistical information like min, max, mean,.... Second, project valhalla aims to neglect the problem with additional object creation, although I am not convinced that this is a huge memory/performance problem overall.
– Turing85
Feb 23 '19 at 11:20
Stream
s were added, I'd be very surprised if IntStream
was a separate type instead of making Streams.summaryStatistics(Stream<int>)
. As it is, IntStream
provides a convenient place to put it.
– Alexey Romanov
Feb 23 '19 at 11:26
IntStream#summaryStatistics()
– Turing85 Feb 23 '19 at 11:22