Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet

This article explores Java collections framework classes that implement the SortedSet interface and how they keep a set of objects in a guaranteed order, independent of the order that they are added to the collection.



The Java collections framework includes classes you use to maintain collections of other objects. These collection classes implement interfaces that support different organizations of the objects they contain. For example, classes that implement the List interface keep objects in the order that they are added to the collection and can take a long time to search (proportionate to the number of objects in the collection). Classes that implement the Map interface keep objects in no particular order but are very fast to search (search time is independent of the number of objects in the collection). Classes that implement the SortedSet interface keep a set of objects in a guaranteed order, independent of the order they are added to the collection; this makes them fast to search.

SortedSet



Collection classes that implement the SortedSet interface impose a total ordering on the objects that they contain. There are two kinds of orderings that can be used with a SortedSet.

Instances of SortedSet classes can use the natural ordering of objects in the collection if the objects in the collection implement the Comparable interface. This means that the order of the objects is determined by the objects themselves.


  • A SortedSet collection imposes a natural ordering on the objects it contains by calling the compareTo method that is part of the SortedSet interface. An object's compareTo method takes one argument that is the other object it compares the object to. The compareTo method returns a positive integer, 0, or a negative integer depending on whether the object is greater than, equal to, or less than the other object.
  • ...

    Read the Rest of this Article at Developer.com
Related Articles
- Enterprise Java Application Architecture and Design
Discover how to combine the Model-View-Controller (MVC) architectural principles with the Java EE platform to derive multitier Java EE application architecture. You will also see how the Java EE design patterns catalog provides guidance and how you can document this architecture using UML notations.
- Java Hashed Collections
- Java Standardization Request 168
- UML for Object-Oriented Design
- GlassFish ESB V2 for SOA Tooling
Regional Articles
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Alabama
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Alaska
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Arizona
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Arkansas
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet California
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Colorado
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Connecticut
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet DC
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Delaware
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Florida
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Georgia
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Hawaii
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Idaho
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Illinois
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Indiana
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Iowa
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Kansas
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Kentucky
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Louisiana
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Maine
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Maryland
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Massachusetts
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Michigan
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Minnesota
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Mississippi
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Missouri
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Montana
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Nebraska
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Nevada
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet New Hampshire
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet New Jersey
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet New Mexico
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet New York
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet North Carolina
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet North Dakota
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Ohio
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Oklahoma
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Oregon
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Pennsylvania
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Rhode Island
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet South Carolina
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet South Dakota
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Tennessee
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Texas
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Utah
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Vermont
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Virginia
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Washington
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet West Virginia
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Wisconsin
- Java Ordered Collections and SortedSet Wyoming
Related Articles
- GlassFish ESB V2 for SOA Tooling
Are you finding it hard to obtain funding to finish building out your Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) technology stack? You may have heard about the Open Source GlassFish Java 5 EE Application Server, but did you know that there is a GlassFish ESB (Enterprise Service Bus) Project that integrates the Open ESB Project? See what it can do for you.
- UML for Object-Oriented Design
- Enterprise Java Application Architecture and Design
- Java Hashed Collections
- Java Standardization Request 168

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Architecture & Design Languages & Tools Project Management Web Services
Database Microsoft & .NET Security Wireless
Java Open Source Techniques XML