in https://try.kotlinlang.org/#/Kotlin%20Koans/Collections/FlatMap/Task.kt
it has sample of using flatMap
and map
seems both are doing the same thing, is there a sample to show the difference of using flatMap
and map
?
the data type:
data class Shop(val name: String, val customers: List<Customer>)
data class Customer(val name: String, val city: City, val orders: List<Order>) {
override fun toString() = "$name from ${city.name}"
}
data class Order(val products: List<Product>, val isDelivered: Boolean)
data class Product(val name: String, val price: Double) {
override fun toString() = "'$name' for $price"
}
data class City(val name: String) {
override fun toString() = name
}
the samples:
fun Shop.getCitiesCustomersAreFrom(): Set<City> =
customers.map { it.city }.toSet()
// would it be same with customers.flatMap { it.city }.toSet() ?
val Customer.orderedProducts: Set<Product> get() {
return orders.flatMap { it.products }.toSet()
// would it be same with return orders.map { it.products }.toSet()
}
Consider the following example: You have a simple data structure Data
with a single property of type List
.
class Data(val items : List<String>)
val dataObjects = listOf(
Data(listOf("a", "b", "c")),
Data(listOf("1", "2", "3"))
)
flatMap
vs. map
With flatMap
, you can "flatten" multiple Data::items
into one collection as shown with the items
variable.
val items: List<String> = dataObjects
.flatMap { it.items } //[a, b, c, 1, 2, 3]
Using map
, on the other hand, simply results in a list of lists.
val items2: List<List<String>> = dataObjects
.map { it.items } //[[a, b, c], [1, 2, 3]]
flatten
There's also a flatten
extension on Iterable<Iterable<T>>
and also Array<Array<T>>
which you can use alternatively to flatMap
when using those types:
val nestedCollections: List<Int> =
listOf(listOf(1,2,3), listOf(5,4,3))
.flatten() //[1, 2, 3, 5, 4, 3]