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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2008 The Guava Authors
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except
 * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License
 * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express
 * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under
 * the License.
 */

package com.google.common.collect;

import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;

import com.google.common.annotations.Beta;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible;
import com.google.common.base.Function;
import com.google.common.base.Joiner;
import com.google.common.base.Optional;
import com.google.common.base.Predicate;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Comparator;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.SortedSet;
import java.util.stream.Stream;
import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable;

/**
 * A discouraged (but not deprecated) precursor to Java's superior {@link Stream} library.
 *
 * 

The following types of methods are provided: * *

    *
  • chaining methods which return a new {@code FluentIterable} based in some way on the * contents of the current one (for example {@link #transform}) *
  • element extraction methods which facilitate the retrieval of certain elements (for example * {@link #last}) *
  • query methods which answer questions about the {@code FluentIterable}'s contents (for * example {@link #anyMatch}) *
  • conversion methods which copy the {@code FluentIterable}'s contents into a new collection * or array (for example {@link #toList}) *
* *

Several lesser-used features are currently available only as static methods on the {@link * Iterables} class. * *

* *

Comparison to streams

* *

{@link Stream} is similar to this class, but generally more powerful, and certainly more * standard. Key differences include: * *

    *
  • A stream is single-use; it becomes invalid as soon as any "terminal operation" such * as {@code findFirst()} or {@code iterator()} is invoked. (Even though {@code Stream} * contains all the right method signatures to implement {@link Iterable}, it does not * actually do so, to avoid implying repeat-iterability.) {@code FluentIterable}, on the other * hand, is multiple-use, and does implement {@link Iterable}. *
  • Streams offer many features not found here, including {@code min/max}, {@code distinct}, * {@code reduce}, {@code sorted}, the very powerful {@code collect}, and built-in support for * parallelizing stream operations. *
  • {@code FluentIterable} contains several features not available on {@code Stream}, which are * noted in the method descriptions below. *
  • Streams include primitive-specialized variants such as {@code IntStream}, the use of which * is strongly recommended. *
  • Streams are standard Java, not requiring a third-party dependency. *
* *

Example

* *

Here is an example that accepts a list from a database call, filters it based on a predicate, * transforms it by invoking {@code toString()} on each element, and returns the first 10 elements * as a {@code List}: * *

{@code
 * ImmutableList results =
 *     FluentIterable.from(database.getClientList())
 *         .filter(Client::isActiveInLastMonth)
 *         .transform(Object::toString)
 *         .limit(10)
 *         .toList();
 * }
* * The approximate stream equivalent is: * *
{@code
 * List results =
 *     database.getClientList()
 *         .stream()
 *         .filter(Client::isActiveInLastMonth)
 *         .map(Object::toString)
 *         .limit(10)
 *         .collect(Collectors.toList());
 * }
* * @author Marcin Mikosik * @since 12.0 */ @GwtCompatible(emulated = true) public abstract class FluentIterable implements Iterable { // We store 'iterable' and use it instead of 'this' to allow Iterables to perform instanceof // checks on the _original_ iterable when FluentIterable.from is used. // To avoid a self retain cycle under j2objc, we store Optional.absent() instead of // Optional.of(this). To access the iterator delegate, call #getDelegate(), which converts to // absent() back to 'this'. private final Optional> iterableDelegate; /** Constructor for use by subclasses. */ protected FluentIterable() { this.iterableDelegate = Optional.absent(); } FluentIterable(Iterable iterable) { checkNotNull(iterable); this.iterableDelegate = Optional.fromNullable(this != iterable ? iterable : null); } private Iterable getDelegate() { return iterableDelegate.or(this); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that wraps {@code iterable}, or {@code iterable} itself if it is * already a {@code FluentIterable}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Collection#stream} if {@code iterable} is a {@link * Collection}; {@link Streams#stream(Iterable)} otherwise. */ public static FluentIterable from(final Iterable iterable) { return (iterable instanceof FluentIterable) ? (FluentIterable) iterable : new FluentIterable(iterable) { @Override public Iterator iterator() { return iterable.iterator(); } }; } /** * Returns a fluent iterable containing {@code elements} in the specified order. * *

The returned iterable is an unmodifiable view of the input array. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link java.util.stream.Stream#of(Object[]) * Stream.of(T...)}. * * @since 20.0 (since 18.0 as an overload of {@code of}) */ @Beta public static FluentIterable from(E[] elements) { return from(Arrays.asList(elements)); } /** * Construct a fluent iterable from another fluent iterable. This is obviously never necessary, * but is intended to help call out cases where one migration from {@code Iterable} to {@code * FluentIterable} has obviated the need to explicitly convert to a {@code FluentIterable}. * * @deprecated instances of {@code FluentIterable} don't need to be converted to {@code * FluentIterable} */ @Deprecated public static FluentIterable from(FluentIterable iterable) { return checkNotNull(iterable); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that combines two iterables. The returned iterable has an iterator * that traverses the elements in {@code a}, followed by the elements in {@code b}. The source * iterators are not polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding input * iterator supports it. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#concat}. * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable concat(Iterable a, Iterable b) { return concatNoDefensiveCopy(a, b); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that combines three iterables. The returned iterable has an iterator * that traverses the elements in {@code a}, followed by the elements in {@code b}, followed by * the elements in {@code c}. The source iterators are not polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding input * iterator supports it. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: use nested calls to {@link Stream#concat}, or see the * advice in {@link #concat(Iterable...)}. * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable concat( Iterable a, Iterable b, Iterable c) { return concatNoDefensiveCopy(a, b, c); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that combines four iterables. The returned iterable has an iterator * that traverses the elements in {@code a}, followed by the elements in {@code b}, followed by * the elements in {@code c}, followed by the elements in {@code d}. The source iterators are not * polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding input * iterator supports it. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: use nested calls to {@link Stream#concat}, or see the * advice in {@link #concat(Iterable...)}. * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable concat( Iterable a, Iterable b, Iterable c, Iterable d) { return concatNoDefensiveCopy(a, b, c, d); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that combines several iterables. The returned iterable has an * iterator that traverses the elements of each iterable in {@code inputs}. The input iterators * are not polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding input * iterator supports it. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: to concatenate an arbitrary number of streams, use {@code * Stream.of(stream1, stream2, ...).flatMap(s -> s)}. If the sources are iterables, use {@code * Stream.of(iter1, iter2, ...).flatMap(Streams::stream)}. * * @throws NullPointerException if any of the provided iterables is {@code null} * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable concat(Iterable... inputs) { return concatNoDefensiveCopy(Arrays.copyOf(inputs, inputs.length)); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that combines several iterables. The returned iterable has an * iterator that traverses the elements of each iterable in {@code inputs}. The input iterators * are not polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding input * iterator supports it. The methods of the returned iterable may throw {@code * NullPointerException} if any of the input iterators is {@code null}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code streamOfStreams.flatMap(s -> s)} or {@code * streamOfIterables.flatMap(Streams::stream)}. (See {@link Streams#stream}.) * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable concat( final Iterable> inputs) { checkNotNull(inputs); return new FluentIterable() { @Override public Iterator iterator() { return Iterators.concat(Iterators.transform(inputs.iterator(), Iterables.toIterator())); } }; } /** Concatenates a varargs array of iterables without making a defensive copy of the array. */ private static FluentIterable concatNoDefensiveCopy( final Iterable... inputs) { for (Iterable input : inputs) { checkNotNull(input); } return new FluentIterable() { @Override public Iterator iterator() { return Iterators.concat( /* lazily generate the iterators on each input only as needed */ new AbstractIndexedListIterator>(inputs.length) { @Override public Iterator get(int i) { return inputs[i].iterator(); } }); } }; } /** * Returns a fluent iterable containing no elements. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#empty}. * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable of() { return FluentIterable.from(ImmutableList.of()); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable containing the specified elements in order. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link java.util.stream.Stream#of(Object[]) * Stream.of(T...)}. * * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public static FluentIterable of(@Nullable E element, E... elements) { return from(Lists.asList(element, elements)); } /** * Returns a string representation of this fluent iterable, with the format {@code [e1, e2, ..., * en]}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.collect(Collectors.joining(", ", "[", "]"))} * or (less efficiently) {@code stream.collect(Collectors.toList()).toString()}. */ @Override public String toString() { return Iterables.toString(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns the number of elements in this fluent iterable. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#count}. */ public final int size() { return Iterables.size(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns {@code true} if this fluent iterable contains any object for which {@code * equals(target)} is true. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.anyMatch(Predicate.isEqual(target))}. */ public final boolean contains(@Nullable Object target) { return Iterables.contains(getDelegate(), target); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable whose {@code Iterator} cycles indefinitely over the elements of this * fluent iterable. * *

That iterator supports {@code remove()} if {@code iterable.iterator()} does. After {@code * remove()} is called, subsequent cycles omit the removed element, which is no longer in this * fluent iterable. The iterator's {@code hasNext()} method returns {@code true} until this fluent * iterable is empty. * *

Warning: Typical uses of the resulting iterator may produce an infinite loop. You * should use an explicit {@code break} or be certain that you will eventually remove all the * elements. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: if the source iterable has only a single element {@code * e}, use {@code Stream.generate(() -> e)}. Otherwise, collect your stream into a collection and * use {@code Stream.generate(() -> collection).flatMap(Collection::stream)}. */ public final FluentIterable cycle() { return from(Iterables.cycle(getDelegate())); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable whose iterators traverse first the elements of this fluent iterable, * followed by those of {@code other}. The iterators are not polled until necessary. * *

The returned iterable's {@code Iterator} supports {@code remove()} when the corresponding * {@code Iterator} supports it. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#concat}. * * @since 18.0 */ @Beta public final FluentIterable append(Iterable other) { return FluentIterable.concat(getDelegate(), other); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable whose iterators traverse first the elements of this fluent iterable, * followed by {@code elements}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code Stream.concat(thisStream, Stream.of(elements))}. * * @since 18.0 */ @Beta public final FluentIterable append(E... elements) { return FluentIterable.concat(getDelegate(), Arrays.asList(elements)); } /** * Returns the elements from this fluent iterable that satisfy a predicate. The resulting fluent * iterable's iterator does not support {@code remove()}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#filter} (same). */ public final FluentIterable filter(Predicate predicate) { return from(Iterables.filter(getDelegate(), predicate)); } /** * Returns the elements from this fluent iterable that are instances of class {@code type}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.filter(type::isInstance).map(type::cast)}. * This does perform a little more work than necessary, so another option is to insert an * unchecked cast at some later point: * *

   * {@code @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") // safe because of ::isInstance check
   * ImmutableList result =
   *     (ImmutableList) stream.filter(NewType.class::isInstance).collect(toImmutableList());}
   * 
*/ @GwtIncompatible // Class.isInstance public final FluentIterable filter(Class type) { return from(Iterables.filter(getDelegate(), type)); } /** * Returns {@code true} if any element in this fluent iterable satisfies the predicate. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#anyMatch} (same). */ public final boolean anyMatch(Predicate predicate) { return Iterables.any(getDelegate(), predicate); } /** * Returns {@code true} if every element in this fluent iterable satisfies the predicate. If this * fluent iterable is empty, {@code true} is returned. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#allMatch} (same). */ public final boolean allMatch(Predicate predicate) { return Iterables.all(getDelegate(), predicate); } /** * Returns an {@link Optional} containing the first element in this fluent iterable that satisfies * the given predicate, if such an element exists. * *

Warning: avoid using a {@code predicate} that matches {@code null}. If {@code null} * is matched in this fluent iterable, a {@link NullPointerException} will be thrown. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.filter(predicate).findFirst()}. */ public final Optional firstMatch(Predicate predicate) { return Iterables.tryFind(getDelegate(), predicate); } /** * Returns a fluent iterable that applies {@code function} to each element of this fluent * iterable. * *

The returned fluent iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} if this iterable's * iterator does. After a successful {@code remove()} call, this fluent iterable no longer * contains the corresponding element. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#map}. */ public final FluentIterable transform(Function function) { return from(Iterables.transform(getDelegate(), function)); } /** * Applies {@code function} to each element of this fluent iterable and returns a fluent iterable * with the concatenated combination of results. {@code function} returns an Iterable of results. * *

The returned fluent iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} if this function-returned * iterables' iterator does. After a successful {@code remove()} call, the returned fluent * iterable no longer contains the corresponding element. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#flatMap} (using a function that produces * streams, not iterables). * * @since 13.0 (required {@code Function>} until 14.0) */ public FluentIterable transformAndConcat( Function> function) { return FluentIterable.concat(transform(function)); } /** * Returns an {@link Optional} containing the first element in this fluent iterable. If the * iterable is empty, {@code Optional.absent()} is returned. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: if the goal is to obtain any element, {@link * Stream#findAny}; if it must specifically be the first element, {@code Stream#findFirst}. * * @throws NullPointerException if the first element is null; if this is a possibility, use {@code * iterator().next()} or {@link Iterables#getFirst} instead. */ public final Optional first() { Iterator iterator = getDelegate().iterator(); return iterator.hasNext() ? Optional.of(iterator.next()) : Optional.absent(); } /** * Returns an {@link Optional} containing the last element in this fluent iterable. If the * iterable is empty, {@code Optional.absent()} is returned. If the underlying {@code iterable} is * a {@link List} with {@link java.util.RandomAccess} support, then this operation is guaranteed * to be {@code O(1)}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.reduce((a, b) -> b)}. * * @throws NullPointerException if the last element is null; if this is a possibility, use {@link * Iterables#getLast} instead. */ public final Optional last() { // Iterables#getLast was inlined here so we don't have to throw/catch a NSEE // TODO(kevinb): Support a concurrently modified collection? Iterable iterable = getDelegate(); if (iterable instanceof List) { List list = (List) iterable; if (list.isEmpty()) { return Optional.absent(); } return Optional.of(list.get(list.size() - 1)); } Iterator iterator = iterable.iterator(); if (!iterator.hasNext()) { return Optional.absent(); } /* * TODO(kevinb): consider whether this "optimization" is worthwhile. Users with SortedSets tend * to know they are SortedSets and probably would not call this method. */ if (iterable instanceof SortedSet) { SortedSet sortedSet = (SortedSet) iterable; return Optional.of(sortedSet.last()); } while (true) { E current = iterator.next(); if (!iterator.hasNext()) { return Optional.of(current); } } } /** * Returns a view of this fluent iterable that skips its first {@code numberToSkip} elements. If * this fluent iterable contains fewer than {@code numberToSkip} elements, the returned fluent * iterable skips all of its elements. * *

Modifications to this fluent iterable before a call to {@code iterator()} are reflected in * the returned fluent iterable. That is, the its iterator skips the first {@code numberToSkip} * elements that exist when the iterator is created, not when {@code skip()} is called. * *

The returned fluent iterable's iterator supports {@code remove()} if the {@code Iterator} of * this fluent iterable supports it. Note that it is not possible to delete the last * skipped element by immediately calling {@code remove()} on the returned fluent iterable's * iterator, as the {@code Iterator} contract states that a call to {@code * remove()} before a * call to {@code next()} will throw an {@link IllegalStateException}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#skip} (same). */ public final FluentIterable skip(int numberToSkip) { return from(Iterables.skip(getDelegate(), numberToSkip)); } /** * Creates a fluent iterable with the first {@code size} elements of this fluent iterable. If this * fluent iterable does not contain that many elements, the returned fluent iterable will have the * same behavior as this fluent iterable. The returned fluent iterable's iterator supports {@code * remove()} if this fluent iterable's iterator does. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@link Stream#limit} (same). * * @param maxSize the maximum number of elements in the returned fluent iterable * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code size} is negative */ public final FluentIterable limit(int maxSize) { return from(Iterables.limit(getDelegate(), maxSize)); } /** * Determines whether this fluent iterable is empty. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code !stream.findAny().isPresent()}. */ public final boolean isEmpty() { return !getDelegate().iterator().hasNext(); } /** * Returns an {@code ImmutableList} containing all of the elements from this fluent iterable in * proper sequence. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: pass {@link ImmutableList#toImmutableList} to {@code * stream.collect()}. * * @throws NullPointerException if any element is {@code null} * @since 14.0 (since 12.0 as {@code toImmutableList()}). */ public final ImmutableList toList() { return ImmutableList.copyOf(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns an {@code ImmutableList} containing all of the elements from this {@code * FluentIterable} in the order specified by {@code comparator}. To produce an {@code * ImmutableList} sorted by its natural ordering, use {@code toSortedList(Ordering.natural())}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: pass {@link ImmutableList#toImmutableList} to {@code * stream.sorted(comparator).collect()}. * * @param comparator the function by which to sort list elements * @throws NullPointerException if any element of this iterable is {@code null} * @since 14.0 (since 13.0 as {@code toSortedImmutableList()}). */ public final ImmutableList toSortedList(Comparator comparator) { return Ordering.from(comparator).immutableSortedCopy(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns an {@code ImmutableSet} containing all of the elements from this fluent iterable with * duplicates removed. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: pass {@link ImmutableSet#toImmutableSet} to {@code * stream.collect()}. * * @throws NullPointerException if any element is {@code null} * @since 14.0 (since 12.0 as {@code toImmutableSet()}). */ public final ImmutableSet toSet() { return ImmutableSet.copyOf(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns an {@code ImmutableSortedSet} containing all of the elements from this {@code * FluentIterable} in the order specified by {@code comparator}, with duplicates (determined by * {@code comparator.compare(x, y) == 0}) removed. To produce an {@code ImmutableSortedSet} sorted * by its natural ordering, use {@code toSortedSet(Ordering.natural())}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: pass {@link ImmutableSortedSet#toImmutableSortedSet} to * {@code stream.collect()}. * * @param comparator the function by which to sort set elements * @throws NullPointerException if any element of this iterable is {@code null} * @since 14.0 (since 12.0 as {@code toImmutableSortedSet()}). */ public final ImmutableSortedSet toSortedSet(Comparator comparator) { return ImmutableSortedSet.copyOf(comparator, getDelegate()); } /** * Returns an {@code ImmutableMultiset} containing all of the elements from this fluent iterable. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: pass {@link ImmutableMultiset#toImmutableMultiset} to * {@code stream.collect()}. * * @throws NullPointerException if any element is null * @since 19.0 */ public final ImmutableMultiset toMultiset() { return ImmutableMultiset.copyOf(getDelegate()); } /** * Returns an immutable map whose keys are the distinct elements of this {@code FluentIterable} * and whose value for each key was computed by {@code valueFunction}. The map's iteration order * is the order of the first appearance of each key in this iterable. * *

When there are multiple instances of a key in this iterable, it is unspecified whether * {@code valueFunction} will be applied to more than one instance of that key and, if it is, * which result will be mapped to that key in the returned map. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.collect(ImmutableMap.toImmutableMap(k -> k, * valueFunction))}. * * @throws NullPointerException if any element of this iterable is {@code null}, or if {@code * valueFunction} produces {@code null} for any key * @since 14.0 */ public final ImmutableMap toMap(Function valueFunction) { return Maps.toMap(getDelegate(), valueFunction); } /** * Creates an index {@code ImmutableListMultimap} that contains the results of applying a * specified function to each item in this {@code FluentIterable} of values. Each element of this * iterable will be stored as a value in the resulting multimap, yielding a multimap with the same * size as this iterable. The key used to store that value in the multimap will be the result of * calling the function on that value. The resulting multimap is created as an immutable snapshot. * In the returned multimap, keys appear in the order they are first encountered, and the values * corresponding to each key appear in the same order as they are encountered. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(keyFunction))} * behaves similarly, but returns a mutable {@code Map>} instead, and may not preserve * the order of entries). * * @param keyFunction the function used to produce the key for each value * @throws NullPointerException if any element of this iterable is {@code null}, or if {@code * keyFunction} produces {@code null} for any key * @since 14.0 */ public final ImmutableListMultimap index(Function keyFunction) { return Multimaps.index(getDelegate(), keyFunction); } /** * Returns a map with the contents of this {@code FluentIterable} as its {@code values}, indexed * by keys derived from those values. In other words, each input value produces an entry in the * map whose key is the result of applying {@code keyFunction} to that value. These entries appear * in the same order as they appeared in this fluent iterable. Example usage: * *

{@code
   * Color red = new Color("red", 255, 0, 0);
   * ...
   * FluentIterable allColors = FluentIterable.from(ImmutableSet.of(red, green, blue));
   *
   * Map colorForName = allColors.uniqueIndex(toStringFunction());
   * assertThat(colorForName).containsEntry("red", red);
   * }
* *

If your index may associate multiple values with each key, use {@link #index(Function) * index}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code * stream.collect(ImmutableMap.toImmutableMap(keyFunction, v -> v))}. * * @param keyFunction the function used to produce the key for each value * @return a map mapping the result of evaluating the function {@code keyFunction} on each value * in this fluent iterable to that value * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code keyFunction} produces the same key for more than one * value in this fluent iterable * @throws NullPointerException if any element of this iterable is {@code null}, or if {@code * keyFunction} produces {@code null} for any key * @since 14.0 */ public final ImmutableMap uniqueIndex(Function keyFunction) { return Maps.uniqueIndex(getDelegate(), keyFunction); } /** * Returns an array containing all of the elements from this fluent iterable in iteration order. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: if an object array is acceptable, use {@code * stream.toArray()}; if {@code type} is a class literal such as {@code MyType.class}, use {@code * stream.toArray(MyType[]::new)}. Otherwise use {@code stream.toArray( len -> (E[]) * Array.newInstance(type, len))}. * * @param type the type of the elements * @return a newly-allocated array into which all the elements of this fluent iterable have been * copied */ @GwtIncompatible // Array.newArray(Class, int) public final E[] toArray(Class type) { return Iterables.toArray(getDelegate(), type); } /** * Copies all the elements from this fluent iterable to {@code collection}. This is equivalent to * calling {@code Iterables.addAll(collection, this)}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.forEachOrdered(collection::add)} or {@code * stream.forEach(collection::add)}. * * @param collection the collection to copy elements to * @return {@code collection}, for convenience * @since 14.0 */ @CanIgnoreReturnValue public final > C copyInto(C collection) { checkNotNull(collection); Iterable iterable = getDelegate(); if (iterable instanceof Collection) { collection.addAll((Collection) iterable); } else { for (E item : iterable) { collection.add(item); } } return collection; } /** * Returns a {@link String} containing all of the elements of this fluent iterable joined with * {@code joiner}. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code joiner.join(stream.iterator())}, or, if you are not * using any optional {@code Joiner} features, {@code * stream.collect(Collectors.joining(delimiter)}. * * @since 18.0 */ @Beta public final String join(Joiner joiner) { return joiner.join(this); } /** * Returns the element at the specified position in this fluent iterable. * *

{@code Stream} equivalent: {@code stream.skip(position).findFirst().get()} (but note * that this throws different exception types, and throws an exception if {@code null} would be * returned). * * @param position position of the element to return * @return the element at the specified position in this fluent iterable * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException if {@code position} is negative or greater than or equal to * the size of this fluent iterable */ // TODO(kevinb): add @Nullable? public final E get(int position) { return Iterables.get(getDelegate(), position); } /** * Returns a stream of this fluent iterable's contents (similar to calling {@link * Collection#stream} on a collection). * *

Note: the earlier in the chain you can switch to {@code Stream} usage (ideally not * going through {@code FluentIterable} at all), the more performant and idiomatic your code will * be. This method is a transitional aid, to be used only when really necessary. * * @since 21.0 */ public final Stream stream() { return Streams.stream(getDelegate()); } /** Function that transforms {@code Iterable} into a fluent iterable. */ private static class FromIterableFunction implements Function, FluentIterable> { @Override public FluentIterable apply(Iterable fromObject) { return FluentIterable.from(fromObject); } } }





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