Java 9 Stream API Improvements

Learn new java 9 improvements in Stream API i.e. takeWhile / dropWhile methods, ofNullable and iterate methods with examples.

Table of Contents

Limiting Stream with takeWhile() and dropWhile() methods
Overloaded Stream iterate method
New Stream ofNullable() method

Limiting Stream with takeWhile() and dropWhile() methods

The new methods takeWhile and dropWhile allow you to get portions of a stream based on a predicate. Here a stream can be either ordered or unordered, so :

  1. On an ordered stream, takeWhile returns the “longest prefix” of elements taken from the stream that match the given predicate, starting at the beginning of the stream.
  2. On an un-ordered stream, takeWhile returns a subset of the stream’s elements that match the given predicate (but not all), starting at the beginning of the stream.

The dropWhile method does the opposite of takeWhile method.

  1. On an ordered stream, dropWhile returns remaining items after the “longest prefix” that match the given predicate.
  2. On an un-ordered stream, dropWhile returns remaining stream elements after dropping subset of elements that match the given predicate.

takeWhile and dropWhile Example

In this example, we have list of chars from ‘a’ to ‘i’. I want all chars which may appear before char ‘d’ in iteration.

List<String> alphabets = List.of("a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g", "h", "i");

List<String> subset1 = alphabets
        .stream()
        .takeWhile(s -> !s.equals("d"))
        .collect(Collectors.toList());

System.out.println(subset1);

Output:

[a, b, c]

As stated before, dropWhile acts opposite to takeWhile method so in above example, if used, it will return all characters which were left by takeWhile predicate.

List<String> alphabets = List.of("a", "b", "c", "d", "e", "f", "g", "h", "i");

List<String> subset2 = alphabets
        .stream()
        .dropWhile(s -> !s.equals("d"))
        .collect(Collectors.toList());

System.out.println(subset2);

Output:

[d, e, f, g, h, i]

Overloaded Stream iterate method

iterate() methods used for creating a stream which starts with a single element (the seed), and subsequent elements are produced by successively applying the unary operator. The result is an infinite stream. To terminate the stream, a limit or some other short-circuiting function, like findFirst or findAny is used.

The iterate method in Java 8 has the signature:

static Stream iterate(final T seed, final UnaryOperator f)

In Java 9, new overloaded version of iterate takes a Predicate as the second argument:

static Stream iterate(T seed, Predicate hasNext, UnaryOperator next)

Let’s see the difference is use of iterate method from java 8 to java 9.

iterate method in Java 8

List<Integer> numbers = Stream.iterate(1, i -> i+1)
                            .limit(10)
                            .collect(Collectors.toList());
        
System.out.println(numbers);

Output:

[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

iterate method in Java 9

List<Integer> numbers = Stream.iterate(1, i -> i <= 10 ,i -> i+1)
                                .collect(Collectors.toList());

System.out.println(numbers);

Output:

[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]

In above examples, the first stream is the Java 8 way of using iterate with a limit. The second one uses a Predicate as the second argument.

New Stream ofNullable() method

Until Java 8, you cannot have null value in a stream. It would have caused NullPointerException.

In Java 9, the ofNullable method lets you create a single-element stream which wraps a value if not null, or is an empty stream otherwise.

Stream<String> stream = Stream.ofNullable("123");
System.out.println(stream.count());

stream = Stream.ofNullable(null);
System.out.println(stream.count());

Output:

1
0

Here, the count method returns the number of non-empty elements in a stream.

Technically, Stream.ofNullable() is very similar to null condition check, when talking in context of stream API.

Drop me your questions in comments section.

Happy Learning !!

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