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In Java 8 Stream API, description of an intermediate (Stateless)operation like filter, map and peek is mentioned as Lazy seeking - means it'll process element by elements when Terminal operation demands.

Operation are implemented independently on the elements in the stream, when terminal operation hits.

But when it comes to some of the Intermediate (Stateful ) operation like sort() , distinct() - need to process the entire input before producing a result.

For example, one cannot produce any results from sorting a stream until one has seen all elements of the stream - means completing the operation with all the elements not independently before terminal operation demands.

This trigger me a question ( might be silly or misunderstood the lazy seeking with Eager ) that still these "Stateful Intermediate Operation" are lazy seeking ?

https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/stream/package-summary.html

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    what do you mean by lazy seeking? these operations are simply lazy, this means they are only executed once a terminal operation is called. Oct 14, 2019 at 19:41
  • Yes - until you hit the terminal operation in stream, intermediate operation will not executed.Ex : Stream.of(1, 2, 3).map(i -> { System.out.println(i); return i; });
    – Yuvaraj AK
    Oct 14, 2019 at 19:43

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Stateful operations may need to process the entire input before producing a result. For example, one cannot produce any results from sorting a stream until one has seen all elements of the stream. As a result, under parallel computation, some pipelines containing stateful intermediate operations may require multiple passes on the data or may need to buffer significant data.

This means exactly what it says. Some stateful operations may process the entire input. If you go a few paragraphs up, you'll see the following (emphasis added):

Intermediate operations return a new stream. They are always lazy; executing an intermediate operation such as filter() does not actually perform any filtering, but instead creates a new stream that, when traversed, contains the elements of the initial stream that match the given predicate. Traversal of the pipeline source does not begin until the terminal operation of the pipeline is executed.

So, yes, they're lazy. If you invoke sort on a Stream and never invoke a terminal operation, sort will not actually do work on the Stream. That's what lazy means. However, once a terminal operation is invoked on the stream, operations like sort will operate on the entire input before producing a result. This makes such operations nasty for parallelization and short-circuiting operations that could otherwise get away with processing only a fraction of the input before producing a value. To be clear:

  • Short-circuiting operations on a Stream may process only a fraction of the input before producing a value.
  • Lazy operations on a Stream won't trigger work to be done on the stream, until such time as a terminal operation is called on said Stream.
  • Intermediate operations are always lazy.

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