My Hashtable in Java would benefit from a value having a tuple structure. What data structure can I use in Java to do that?
Hashtable<Long, Tuple<Set<Long>,Set<Long>>> table = ...
My Hashtable in Java would benefit from a value having a tuple structure. What data structure can I use in Java to do that?
Hashtable<Long, Tuple<Set<Long>,Set<Long>>> table = ...
I don't think there is a general purpose tuple class in Java but a custom one might be as easy as the following:
public class Tuple<X, Y> {
public final X x;
public final Y y;
public Tuple(X x, Y y) {
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
}
Of course, there are some important implications of how to design this class further regarding equality, immutability, etc., especially if you plan to use instances as keys for hashing.
javatuples is a dedicated project for tuples in Java.
Unit<A> (1 element)
Pair<A,B> (2 elements)
Triplet<A,B,C> (3 elements)
Apache Commons provided some common java utilities including a Pair. It implements Map.Entry
, Comparable
and Serializable
.
If you are looking for a built-in Java two-element tuple, try AbstractMap.SimpleEntry
.
As an extension to @maerics nice answer, I've added a few useful methods:
public class Tuple<X, Y> {
public final X x;
public final Y y;
public Tuple(X x, Y y) {
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return "(" + x + "," + y + ")";
}
@Override
public boolean equals(Object other) {
if (other == this) {
return true;
}
if (!(other instanceof Tuple)){
return false;
}
Tuple<X,Y> other_ = (Tuple<X,Y>) other;
// this may cause NPE if nulls are valid values for x or y. The logic may be improved to handle nulls properly, if needed.
return other_.x.equals(this.x) && other_.y.equals(this.y);
}
@Override
public int hashCode() {
final int prime = 31;
int result = 1;
result = prime * result + ((x == null) ? 0 : x.hashCode());
result = prime * result + ((y == null) ? 0 : y.hashCode());
return result;
}
}
Another 2 cents : Starting with Java 7, there is now a class for this in standard Lib : javafx.util.Pair.
And Yes, It is standard Java, now that JavaFx is included in the JDK :)
Here's this exact same question elsewhere, that includes a more robust equals
, hash
that maerics alludes to:
That discussion goes on to mirror the maerics vs ColinD approaches of "should I re-use a class Tuple with an unspecific name, or make a new class with specific names each time I encounter this situation". Years ago I was in the latter camp; I've evolved into supporting the former.
With lombok it's easy to declare a Pair
class:
@Data(staticConstructor = "of")
public class Pair<A, B> {
private final A left;
private final B right;
}
This will generates getters, static constructor named "of", equals()
, hashcode()
and toString()
.
see @Data
documentation for more information
This object provides a sensible implementation of equals(), returning true if equals() is true on each of the contained objects.
Though the article is pretty old now, and though I understand that I'm not really very helpful, I think the proposal described in Adding tuples to Java: a study in lightweight data structures, would have been nice in mainstream Java.
You can do things like:
int a;
char b;
float c;
[a,b,c] = [3,'a',2.33];
or
[int,int,char] x = [1,2,'a'];
or
public [int,boolean] Find(int i)
{
int idx = FindInArray(A,i);
return [idx,idx>=0];
}
[idx, found] = Find(7);
Here tuples are:
This approach increases
Create a class that describes the concept you're actually modeling and use that. It can just store two Set<Long>
and provide accessors for them, but it should be named to indicate what exactly each of those sets is and why they're grouped together.
To supplement @maerics's answer, here is the Comparable
tuple:
import java.util.*;
/**
* A tuple of two classes that implement Comparable
*/
public class ComparableTuple<X extends Comparable<? super X>, Y extends Comparable<? super Y>>
extends Tuple<X, Y>
implements Comparable<ComparableTuple<X, Y>>
{
public ComparableTuple(X x, Y y) {
super(x, y);
}
/**
* Implements lexicographic order
*/
public int compareTo(ComparableTuple<X, Y> other) {
int d = this.x.compareTo(other.x);
if (d == 0)
return this.y.compareTo(other.y);
return d;
}
}
I will start from a general point of view about tuples in Java and finish with an implication for your concrete problem.
1) The way tuples are used in non-generic languages is avoided in Java because they are not type-safe (e.g. in Python: tuple = (4, 7.9, 'python')
). If you still want to use something like a general purpose tuple (which is not recommended), you should use Object[]
or List<Object>
and cast the elements after a check with instanceof
to assure type-safety.
Usually, tuples in a certain setting are always used the same way with containing the same structure. In Java, you have to define this structure explicitly in a class
to provide well-defined, type-safe values and methods. This seems annoying and unnecessairy at first but prevents errors already at compile-time.
2) If you need a tuple containing the same (super-)classes Foo
, use Foo[]
, List<Foo>
, or List<? extends Foo>
(or the lists's immutable counterparts). Since a tuple is not of a defined length, this solution is equivalent.
3) In your case, you seem to need a Pair
(i.e. a tuple of well-defined length 2). This renders maerics's answer or one of the supplementary answers the most efficient since you can reuse the code in the future.