java.util
Class LinkedHashSet<T>
- Cloneable, Collection<E>, Iterable<E>, Serializable, Set<E>
This class provides a hashtable-backed implementation of the
Set interface, with predictable traversal order.
It uses a hash-bucket approach; that is, hash collisions are handled
by linking the new node off of the pre-existing node (or list of
nodes). In this manner, techniques such as linear probing (which
can cause primary clustering) and rehashing (which does not fit very
well with Java's method of precomputing hash codes) are avoided. In
addition, this maintains a doubly-linked list which tracks insertion
order. Note that the insertion order is not modified if an
add
simply reinserts an element in the set.
One of the nice features of tracking insertion order is that you can
copy a set, and regardless of the implementation of the original,
produce the same results when iterating over the copy. This is possible
without needing the overhead of
TreeSet
.
Under ideal circumstances (no collisions), LinkedHashSet offers O(1)
performance on most operations. In the worst case (all elements map
to the same hash code -- very unlikely), most operations are O(n).
LinkedHashSet accepts the null entry. It is not synchronized, so if
you need multi-threaded access, consider using:
Set s = Collections.synchronizedSet(new LinkedHashSet(...));
The iterators are
fail-fast, meaning that any structural
modification, except for
remove()
called on the iterator
itself, cause the iterator to throw a
ConcurrentModificationException
rather than exhibit
non-deterministic behavior.
LinkedHashSet() - Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the default
capacity (11) and loadFacor (0.75).
|
LinkedHashSet(T> c) - Construct a new HashSet with the same elements as are in the supplied
collection (eliminating any duplicates, of course).
|
LinkedHashSet(int initialCapacity) - Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the supplied
capacity and the default load factor (0.75).
|
LinkedHashSet(int initialCapacity, float loadFactor) - Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the supplied
capacity and load factor.
|
T[] toArray , add , addAll , clear , contains , containsAll , isEmpty , iterator , remove , removeAll , retainAll , size , toArray , toString |
clone , equals , extends Object> getClass , finalize , hashCode , notify , notifyAll , toString , wait , wait , wait |
LinkedHashSet
public LinkedHashSet()
Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the default
capacity (11) and loadFacor (0.75).
LinkedHashSet
public LinkedHashSet(T> c)
Construct a new HashSet with the same elements as are in the supplied
collection (eliminating any duplicates, of course). The backing storage
has twice the size of the collection, or the default size of 11,
whichever is greater; and the default load factor (0.75).
c
- a collection of initial set elements
LinkedHashSet
public LinkedHashSet(int initialCapacity)
Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the supplied
capacity and the default load factor (0.75).
initialCapacity
- the initial capacity of the backing HashMap
LinkedHashSet
public LinkedHashSet(int initialCapacity,
float loadFactor)
Construct a new, empty HashSet whose backing HashMap has the supplied
capacity and load factor.
initialCapacity
- the initial capacity of the backing HashMaploadFactor
- the load factor of the backing HashMap
LinkedHashSet.java -- a set backed by a LinkedHashMap, for linked
list traversal.
Copyright (C) 2001, 2004, 2005 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of GNU Classpath.
GNU Classpath is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
any later version.
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