Java: how to transform from List<T> to Map<f1(T), List(f2(T))> without iterating

Kkkev picture Kkkev · Dec 2, 2011 · Viewed 13.2k times · Source

I have a list of objects that I need to transform to a map where the keys are a function of each element, and the values are lists of another function of each element. Effectively this is grouping the elements by a function of them.

For example, suppose a simple element class:

class Element {
    int f1() { ... }
    String f2() { ... }
}

and a list of these:

[
    { f1=100, f2="Alice" },
    { f1=200, f2="Bob" },
    { f1=100, f2="Charles" },
    { f1=300, f2="Dave" }
]

then I would like a map as follows:

{
    {key=100, value=[ "Alice", "Charles" ]},
    {key=200, value=[ "Bob" ]},
    {key=300, value=[ "Dave" ]}
}

Can anyone suggest a succinct way of doing this in Java without iterating? A combination of LambdaJ's group method with Guava's Maps.transform nearly gets there, but group doesn't generate a map.

Answer

Etienne Neveu picture Etienne Neveu · Dec 2, 2011

Guava has Maps.uniqueIndex(Iterable values, Function keyFunction) and Multimaps.index(Iterable values, Function keyFunction), but they don't transform the values. There are some requests to add utility methods that do what you want, but for now, you'll have to roll it yourself using Multimaps.index() and Multimaps.transformValues():

static class Person {
    private final Integer age;
    private final String name;

    public Person(Integer age, String name) {
        this.age = age;
        this.name = name;
    }

    public Integer getAge() {
        return age;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }
}

private enum GetAgeFunction implements Function<Person, Integer> {
    INSTANCE;

    @Override
    public Integer apply(Person person) {
        return person.getAge();
    }
}

private enum GetNameFunction implements Function<Person, String> {
    INSTANCE;

    @Override
    public String apply(Person person) {
        return person.getName();
    }
}

public void example() {
    List<Person> persons = ImmutableList.of(
            new Person(100, "Alice"),
            new Person(200, "Bob"),
            new Person(100, "Charles"),
            new Person(300, "Dave")
    );

    ListMultimap<Integer, String> ageToNames = getAgeToNamesMultimap(persons);

    System.out.println(ageToNames);

    // prints {100=[Alice, Charles], 200=[Bob], 300=[Dave]}
}

private ListMultimap<Integer, String> getAgeToNamesMultimap(List<Person> persons) {
    ImmutableListMultimap<Integer, Person> ageToPersons = Multimaps.index(persons, GetAgeFunction.INSTANCE);
    ListMultimap<Integer, String> ageToNames = Multimaps.transformValues(ageToPersons, GetNameFunction.INSTANCE);

    // Multimaps.transformValues() returns a *lazily* transformed view of "ageToPersons"
    // If we want to iterate multiple times over it, it's better to create a copy
    return ImmutableListMultimap.copyOf(ageToNames);
}

A re-usable utility method could be:

public static <E, K, V> ImmutableListMultimap<K, V> keyToValuesMultimap(Iterable<E> elements, Function<E, K> keyFunction, Function<E, V> valueFunction) {
    ImmutableListMultimap<K, E> keysToElements = Multimaps.index(elements, keyFunction);
    ListMultimap<K, V> keysToValuesLazy = Multimaps.transformValues(keysToElements, valueFunction);
    return ImmutableListMultimap.copyOf(keysToValuesLazy);
}

I guess we could improve the generics in the signature by using Function<? extends E, K> or something, but I don't have the time to delve further...