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25 package java.util.stream;
26 
27 import java.nio.charset.Charset;
28 import java.util.Arrays;
29 import java.util.Collection;
30 import java.util.Comparator;
31 import java.util.Iterator;
32 import java.util.Objects;
33 import java.util.Optional;
34 import java.util.Spliterator;
35 import java.util.Spliterators;
36 import java.util.concurrent.ConcurrentHashMap;
37 import java.util.function.BiConsumer;
38 import java.util.function.BiFunction;
39 import java.util.function.BinaryOperator;
40 import java.util.function.Consumer;
41 import java.util.function.Function;
42 import java.util.function.IntFunction;
43 import java.util.function.Predicate;
44 import java.util.function.Supplier;
45 import java.util.function.ToDoubleFunction;
46 import java.util.function.ToIntFunction;
47 import java.util.function.ToLongFunction;
48 import java.util.function.UnaryOperator;
49 
50 /**
51  * A sequence of elements supporting sequential and parallel aggregate
52  * operations.  The following example illustrates an aggregate operation using
53  * {@link Stream} and {@link IntStream}:
54  *
55  * <pre>{@code
56  *     int sum = widgets.stream()
57  *                      .filter(w -> w.getColor() == RED)
58  *                      .mapToInt(w -> w.getWeight())
59  *                      .sum();
60  * }</pre>
61  *
62  * In this example, {@code widgets} is a {@code Collection<Widget>}.  We create
63  * a stream of {@code Widget} objects via {@link Collection#stream Collection.stream()},
64  * filter it to produce a stream containing only the red widgets, and then
65  * transform it into a stream of {@code int} values representing the weight of
66  * each red widget. Then this stream is summed to produce a total weight.
67  *
68  * <p>In addition to {@code Stream}, which is a stream of object references,
69  * there are primitive specializations for {@link IntStream}, {@link LongStream},
70  * and {@link DoubleStream}, all of which are referred to as "streams" and
71  * conform to the characteristics and restrictions described here.
72  *
73  * <p>To perform a computation, stream
74  * <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">operations</a> are composed into a
75  * <em>stream pipeline</em>.  A stream pipeline consists of a source (which
76  * might be an array, a collection, a generator function, an I/O channel,
77  * etc), zero or more <em>intermediate operations</em> (which transform a
78  * stream into another stream, such as {@link Stream#filter(Predicate)}), and a
79  * <em>terminal operation</em> (which produces a result or side-effect, such
80  * as {@link Stream#count()} or {@link Stream#forEach(Consumer)}).
81  * Streams are lazy; computation on the source data is only performed when the
82  * terminal operation is initiated, and source elements are consumed only
83  * as needed.
84  *
85  * <p>Collections and streams, while bearing some superficial similarities,
86  * have different goals.  Collections are primarily concerned with the efficient
87  * management of, and access to, their elements.  By contrast, streams do not
88  * provide a means to directly access or manipulate their elements, and are
89  * instead concerned with declaratively describing their source and the
90  * computational operations which will be performed in aggregate on that source.
91  * However, if the provided stream operations do not offer the desired
92  * functionality, the {@link #iterator()} and {@link #spliterator()} operations
93  * can be used to perform a controlled traversal.
94  *
95  * <p>A stream pipeline, like the "widgets" example above, can be viewed as
96  * a <em>query</em> on the stream source.  Unless the source was explicitly
97  * designed for concurrent modification (such as a {@link ConcurrentHashMap}),
98  * unpredictable or erroneous behavior may result from modifying the stream
99  * source while it is being queried.
100  *
101  * <p>Most stream operations accept parameters that describe user-specified
102  * behavior, such as the lambda expression {@code w -> w.getWeight()} passed to
103  * {@code mapToInt} in the example above.  To preserve correct behavior,
104  * these <em>behavioral parameters</em>:
105  * <ul>
106  * <li>must be <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>
107  * (they do not modify the stream source); and</li>
108  * <li>in most cases must be <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
109  * (their result should not depend on any state that might change during execution
110  * of the stream pipeline).</li>
111  * </ul>
112  *
113  * <p>Such parameters are always instances of a
114  * <a href="../function/package-summary.html">functional interface</a> such
115  * as {@link java.util.function.Function}, and are often lambda expressions or
116  * method references.  Unless otherwise specified these parameters must be
117  * <em>non-null</em>.
118  *
119  * <p>A stream should be operated on (invoking an intermediate or terminal stream
120  * operation) only once.  This rules out, for example, "forked" streams, where
121  * the same source feeds two or more pipelines, or multiple traversals of the
122  * same stream.  A stream implementation may throw {@link IllegalStateException}
123  * if it detects that the stream is being reused. However, since some stream
124  * operations may return their receiver rather than a new stream object, it may
125  * not be possible to detect reuse in all cases.
126  *
127  * <p>Streams have a {@link #close()} method and implement {@link AutoCloseable},
128  * but nearly all stream instances do not actually need to be closed after use.
129  * Generally, only streams whose source is an IO channel will require closing.  Most streams
130  * are backed by collections, arrays, or generating functions, which require no
131  * special resource management.  (If a stream does require closing, it can be
132  * declared as a resource in a {@code try}-with-resources statement.)
133  *
134  * <p>Stream pipelines may execute either sequentially or in
135  * <a href="package-summary.html#Parallelism">parallel</a>.  This
136  * execution mode is a property of the stream.  Streams are created
137  * with an initial choice of sequential or parallel execution.  (For example,
138  * {@link Collection#stream() Collection.stream()} creates a sequential stream,
139  * and {@link Collection#parallelStream() Collection.parallelStream()} creates
140  * a parallel one.)  This choice of execution mode may be modified by the
141  * {@link #sequential()} or {@link #parallel()} methods, and may be queried with
142  * the {@link #isParallel()} method.
143  *
144  * @param <T> the type of the stream elements
145  * @since 1.8
146  * @see IntStream
147  * @see LongStream
148  * @see DoubleStream
149  * @see <a href="package-summary.html">java.util.stream</a>
150  */
151 public interface Stream<T> extends BaseStream<T, Stream<T>> {
152 
153     /**
154      * Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream that match
155      * the given predicate.
156      *
157      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
158      * operation</a>.
159      *
160      * @param predicate a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
161      *                  <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
162      *                  predicate to apply to each element to determine if it
163      *                  should be included
164      * @return the new stream
165      */
filter(Predicate<? super T> predicate)166     Stream<T> filter(Predicate<? super T> predicate);
167 
168     /**
169      * Returns a stream consisting of the results of applying the given
170      * function to the elements of this stream.
171      *
172      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
173      * operation</a>.
174      *
175      * @param <R> The element type of the new stream
176      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
177      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
178      *               function to apply to each element
179      * @return the new stream
180      */
map(Function<? super T, ? extends R> mapper)181     <R> Stream<R> map(Function<? super T, ? extends R> mapper);
182 
183     /**
184      * Returns an {@code IntStream} consisting of the results of applying the
185      * given function to the elements of this stream.
186      *
187      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">
188      *     intermediate operation</a>.
189      *
190      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
191      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
192      *               function to apply to each element
193      * @return the new stream
194      */
mapToInt(ToIntFunction<? super T> mapper)195     IntStream mapToInt(ToIntFunction<? super T> mapper);
196 
197     /**
198      * Returns a {@code LongStream} consisting of the results of applying the
199      * given function to the elements of this stream.
200      *
201      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
202      * operation</a>.
203      *
204      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
205      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
206      *               function to apply to each element
207      * @return the new stream
208      */
mapToLong(ToLongFunction<? super T> mapper)209     LongStream mapToLong(ToLongFunction<? super T> mapper);
210 
211     /**
212      * Returns a {@code DoubleStream} consisting of the results of applying the
213      * given function to the elements of this stream.
214      *
215      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
216      * operation</a>.
217      *
218      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
219      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
220      *               function to apply to each element
221      * @return the new stream
222      */
mapToDouble(ToDoubleFunction<? super T> mapper)223     DoubleStream mapToDouble(ToDoubleFunction<? super T> mapper);
224 
225     /**
226      * Returns a stream consisting of the results of replacing each element of
227      * this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by applying
228      * the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped stream is
229      * {@link java.util.stream.BaseStream#close() closed} after its contents
230      * have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is {@code null}
231      * an empty stream is used, instead.)
232      *
233      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
234      * operation</a>.
235      *
236      * @apiNote
237      * The {@code flatMap()} operation has the effect of applying a one-to-many
238      * transformation to the elements of the stream, and then flattening the
239      * resulting elements into a new stream.
240      *
241      * <p><b>Examples.</b>
242      *
243      * <p>If {@code orders} is a stream of purchase orders, and each purchase
244      * order contains a collection of line items, then the following produces a
245      * stream containing all the line items in all the orders:
246      * <pre>{@code
247      *     orders.flatMap(order -> order.getLineItems().stream())...
248      * }</pre>
249      *
250      * <p>If {@code path} is the path to a file, then the following produces a
251      * stream of the {@code words} contained in that file:
252      * <pre>{@code
253      *     Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(path, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
254      *     Stream<String> words = lines.flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(" +")));
255      * }</pre>
256      * The {@code mapper} function passed to {@code flatMap} splits a line,
257      * using a simple regular expression, into an array of words, and then
258      * creates a stream of words from that array.
259      *
260      * @param <R> The element type of the new stream
261      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
262      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
263      *               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
264      *               of new values
265      * @return the new stream
266      */
flatMap(Function<? super T, ? extends Stream<? extends R>> mapper)267     <R> Stream<R> flatMap(Function<? super T, ? extends Stream<? extends R>> mapper);
268 
269     /**
270      * Returns an {@code IntStream} consisting of the results of replacing each
271      * element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
272      * applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
273      * stream is {@link java.util.stream.BaseStream#close() closed} after its
274      * contents have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
275      * {@code null} an empty stream is used, instead.)
276      *
277      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
278      * operation</a>.
279      *
280      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
281      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
282      *               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
283      *               of new values
284      * @return the new stream
285      * @see #flatMap(Function)
286      */
flatMapToInt(Function<? super T, ? extends IntStream> mapper)287     IntStream flatMapToInt(Function<? super T, ? extends IntStream> mapper);
288 
289     /**
290      * Returns an {@code LongStream} consisting of the results of replacing each
291      * element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
292      * applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
293      * stream is {@link java.util.stream.BaseStream#close() closed} after its
294      * contents have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
295      * {@code null} an empty stream is used, instead.)
296      *
297      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
298      * operation</a>.
299      *
300      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
301      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
302      *               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
303      *               of new values
304      * @return the new stream
305      * @see #flatMap(Function)
306      */
flatMapToLong(Function<? super T, ? extends LongStream> mapper)307     LongStream flatMapToLong(Function<? super T, ? extends LongStream> mapper);
308 
309     /**
310      * Returns an {@code DoubleStream} consisting of the results of replacing
311      * each element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced
312      * by applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
313      * stream is {@link java.util.stream.BaseStream#close() closed} after its
314      * contents have placed been into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
315      * {@code null} an empty stream is used, instead.)
316      *
317      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
318      * operation</a>.
319      *
320      * @param mapper a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
321      *               <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
322      *               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
323      *               of new values
324      * @return the new stream
325      * @see #flatMap(Function)
326      */
flatMapToDouble(Function<? super T, ? extends DoubleStream> mapper)327     DoubleStream flatMapToDouble(Function<? super T, ? extends DoubleStream> mapper);
328 
329     /**
330      * Returns a stream consisting of the distinct elements (according to
331      * {@link Object#equals(Object)}) of this stream.
332      *
333      * <p>For ordered streams, the selection of distinct elements is stable
334      * (for duplicated elements, the element appearing first in the encounter
335      * order is preserved.)  For unordered streams, no stability guarantees
336      * are made.
337      *
338      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">stateful
339      * intermediate operation</a>.
340      *
341      * @apiNote
342      * Preserving stability for {@code distinct()} in parallel pipelines is
343      * relatively expensive (requires that the operation act as a full barrier,
344      * with substantial buffering overhead), and stability is often not needed.
345      * Using an unordered stream source (such as {@link #generate(Supplier)})
346      * or removing the ordering constraint with {@link #unordered()} may result
347      * in significantly more efficient execution for {@code distinct()} in parallel
348      * pipelines, if the semantics of your situation permit.  If consistency
349      * with encounter order is required, and you are experiencing poor performance
350      * or memory utilization with {@code distinct()} in parallel pipelines,
351      * switching to sequential execution with {@link #sequential()} may improve
352      * performance.
353      *
354      * @return the new stream
355      */
distinct()356     Stream<T> distinct();
357 
358     /**
359      * Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, sorted
360      * according to natural order.  If the elements of this stream are not
361      * {@code Comparable}, a {@code java.lang.ClassCastException} may be thrown
362      * when the terminal operation is executed.
363      *
364      * <p>For ordered streams, the sort is stable.  For unordered streams, no
365      * stability guarantees are made.
366      *
367      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">stateful
368      * intermediate operation</a>.
369      *
370      * @return the new stream
371      */
sorted()372     Stream<T> sorted();
373 
374     /**
375      * Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, sorted
376      * according to the provided {@code Comparator}.
377      *
378      * <p>For ordered streams, the sort is stable.  For unordered streams, no
379      * stability guarantees are made.
380      *
381      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">stateful
382      * intermediate operation</a>.
383      *
384      * @param comparator a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
385      *                   <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
386      *                   {@code Comparator} to be used to compare stream elements
387      * @return the new stream
388      */
sorted(Comparator<? super T> comparator)389     Stream<T> sorted(Comparator<? super T> comparator);
390 
391     /**
392      * Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, additionally
393      * performing the provided action on each element as elements are consumed
394      * from the resulting stream.
395      *
396      * <p>This is an <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">intermediate
397      * operation</a>.
398      *
399      * <p>For parallel stream pipelines, the action may be called at
400      * whatever time and in whatever thread the element is made available by the
401      * upstream operation.  If the action modifies shared state,
402      * it is responsible for providing the required synchronization.
403      *
404      * @apiNote This method exists mainly to support debugging, where you want
405      * to see the elements as they flow past a certain point in a pipeline:
406      * <pre>{@code
407      *     Stream.of("one", "two", "three", "four")
408      *         .filter(e -> e.length() > 3)
409      *         .peek(e -> System.out.println("Filtered value: " + e))
410      *         .map(String::toUpperCase)
411      *         .peek(e -> System.out.println("Mapped value: " + e))
412      *         .collect(Collectors.toList());
413      * }</pre>
414      *
415      * @param action a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">
416      *                 non-interfering</a> action to perform on the elements as
417      *                 they are consumed from the stream
418      * @return the new stream
419      */
peek(Consumer<? super T> action)420     Stream<T> peek(Consumer<? super T> action);
421 
422     /**
423      * Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, truncated
424      * to be no longer than {@code maxSize} in length.
425      *
426      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
427      * stateful intermediate operation</a>.
428      *
429      * @apiNote
430      * While {@code limit()} is generally a cheap operation on sequential
431      * stream pipelines, it can be quite expensive on ordered parallel pipelines,
432      * especially for large values of {@code maxSize}, since {@code limit(n)}
433      * is constrained to return not just any <em>n</em> elements, but the
434      * <em>first n</em> elements in the encounter order.  Using an unordered
435      * stream source (such as {@link #generate(Supplier)}) or removing the
436      * ordering constraint with {@link #unordered()} may result in significant
437      * speedups of {@code limit()} in parallel pipelines, if the semantics of
438      * your situation permit.  If consistency with encounter order is required,
439      * and you are experiencing poor performance or memory utilization with
440      * {@code limit()} in parallel pipelines, switching to sequential execution
441      * with {@link #sequential()} may improve performance.
442      *
443      * @param maxSize the number of elements the stream should be limited to
444      * @return the new stream
445      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code maxSize} is negative
446      */
limit(long maxSize)447     Stream<T> limit(long maxSize);
448 
449     /**
450      * Returns a stream consisting of the remaining elements of this stream
451      * after discarding the first {@code n} elements of the stream.
452      * If this stream contains fewer than {@code n} elements then an
453      * empty stream will be returned.
454      *
455      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">stateful
456      * intermediate operation</a>.
457      *
458      * @apiNote
459      * While {@code skip()} is generally a cheap operation on sequential
460      * stream pipelines, it can be quite expensive on ordered parallel pipelines,
461      * especially for large values of {@code n}, since {@code skip(n)}
462      * is constrained to skip not just any <em>n</em> elements, but the
463      * <em>first n</em> elements in the encounter order.  Using an unordered
464      * stream source (such as {@link #generate(Supplier)}) or removing the
465      * ordering constraint with {@link #unordered()} may result in significant
466      * speedups of {@code skip()} in parallel pipelines, if the semantics of
467      * your situation permit.  If consistency with encounter order is required,
468      * and you are experiencing poor performance or memory utilization with
469      * {@code skip()} in parallel pipelines, switching to sequential execution
470      * with {@link #sequential()} may improve performance.
471      *
472      * @param n the number of leading elements to skip
473      * @return the new stream
474      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code n} is negative
475      */
skip(long n)476     Stream<T> skip(long n);
477 
478     /**
479      * Performs an action for each element of this stream.
480      *
481      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
482      * operation</a>.
483      *
484      * <p>The behavior of this operation is explicitly nondeterministic.
485      * For parallel stream pipelines, this operation does <em>not</em>
486      * guarantee to respect the encounter order of the stream, as doing so
487      * would sacrifice the benefit of parallelism.  For any given element, the
488      * action may be performed at whatever time and in whatever thread the
489      * library chooses.  If the action accesses shared state, it is
490      * responsible for providing the required synchronization.
491      *
492      * @param action a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">
493      *               non-interfering</a> action to perform on the elements
494      */
forEach(Consumer<? super T> action)495     void forEach(Consumer<? super T> action);
496 
497     /**
498      * Performs an action for each element of this stream, in the encounter
499      * order of the stream if the stream has a defined encounter order.
500      *
501      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
502      * operation</a>.
503      *
504      * <p>This operation processes the elements one at a time, in encounter
505      * order if one exists.  Performing the action for one element
506      * <a href="../concurrent/package-summary.html#MemoryVisibility"><i>happens-before</i></a>
507      * performing the action for subsequent elements, but for any given element,
508      * the action may be performed in whatever thread the library chooses.
509      *
510      * @param action a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">
511      *               non-interfering</a> action to perform on the elements
512      * @see #forEach(Consumer)
513      */
forEachOrdered(Consumer<? super T> action)514     void forEachOrdered(Consumer<? super T> action);
515 
516     /**
517      * Returns an array containing the elements of this stream.
518      *
519      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
520      * operation</a>.
521      *
522      * @return an array containing the elements of this stream
523      */
toArray()524     Object[] toArray();
525 
526     /**
527      * Returns an array containing the elements of this stream, using the
528      * provided {@code generator} function to allocate the returned array, as
529      * well as any additional arrays that might be required for a partitioned
530      * execution or for resizing.
531      *
532      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
533      * operation</a>.
534      *
535      * @apiNote
536      * The generator function takes an integer, which is the size of the
537      * desired array, and produces an array of the desired size.  This can be
538      * concisely expressed with an array constructor reference:
539      * <pre>{@code
540      *     Person[] men = people.stream()
541      *                          .filter(p -> p.getGender() == MALE)
542      *                          .toArray(Person[]::new);
543      * }</pre>
544      *
545      * @param <A> the element type of the resulting array
546      * @param generator a function which produces a new array of the desired
547      *                  type and the provided length
548      * @return an array containing the elements in this stream
549      * @throws ArrayStoreException if the runtime type of the array returned
550      * from the array generator is not a supertype of the runtime type of every
551      * element in this stream
552      */
toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator)553     <A> A[] toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator);
554 
555     /**
556      * Performs a <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a> on the
557      * elements of this stream, using the provided identity value and an
558      * <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>
559      * accumulation function, and returns the reduced value.  This is equivalent
560      * to:
561      * <pre>{@code
562      *     T result = identity;
563      *     for (T element : this stream)
564      *         result = accumulator.apply(result, element)
565      *     return result;
566      * }</pre>
567      *
568      * but is not constrained to execute sequentially.
569      *
570      * <p>The {@code identity} value must be an identity for the accumulator
571      * function. This means that for all {@code t},
572      * {@code accumulator.apply(identity, t)} is equal to {@code t}.
573      * The {@code accumulator} function must be an
574      * <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a> function.
575      *
576      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
577      * operation</a>.
578      *
579      * @apiNote Sum, min, max, average, and string concatenation are all special
580      * cases of reduction. Summing a stream of numbers can be expressed as:
581      *
582      * <pre>{@code
583      *     Integer sum = integers.reduce(0, (a, b) -> a+b);
584      * }</pre>
585      *
586      * or:
587      *
588      * <pre>{@code
589      *     Integer sum = integers.reduce(0, Integer::sum);
590      * }</pre>
591      *
592      * <p>While this may seem a more roundabout way to perform an aggregation
593      * compared to simply mutating a running total in a loop, reduction
594      * operations parallelize more gracefully, without needing additional
595      * synchronization and with greatly reduced risk of data races.
596      *
597      * @param identity the identity value for the accumulating function
598      * @param accumulator an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
599      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
600      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
601      *                    function for combining two values
602      * @return the result of the reduction
603      */
reduce(T identity, BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)604     T reduce(T identity, BinaryOperator<T> accumulator);
605 
606     /**
607      * Performs a <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a> on the
608      * elements of this stream, using an
609      * <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a> accumulation
610      * function, and returns an {@code Optional} describing the reduced value,
611      * if any. This is equivalent to:
612      * <pre>{@code
613      *     boolean foundAny = false;
614      *     T result = null;
615      *     for (T element : this stream) {
616      *         if (!foundAny) {
617      *             foundAny = true;
618      *             result = element;
619      *         }
620      *         else
621      *             result = accumulator.apply(result, element);
622      *     }
623      *     return foundAny ? Optional.of(result) : Optional.empty();
624      * }</pre>
625      *
626      * but is not constrained to execute sequentially.
627      *
628      * <p>The {@code accumulator} function must be an
629      * <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a> function.
630      *
631      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
632      * operation</a>.
633      *
634      * @param accumulator an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
635      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
636      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
637      *                    function for combining two values
638      * @return an {@link Optional} describing the result of the reduction
639      * @throws NullPointerException if the result of the reduction is null
640      * @see #reduce(Object, BinaryOperator)
641      * @see #min(Comparator)
642      * @see #max(Comparator)
643      */
reduce(BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)644     Optional<T> reduce(BinaryOperator<T> accumulator);
645 
646     /**
647      * Performs a <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a> on the
648      * elements of this stream, using the provided identity, accumulation and
649      * combining functions.  This is equivalent to:
650      * <pre>{@code
651      *     U result = identity;
652      *     for (T element : this stream)
653      *         result = accumulator.apply(result, element)
654      *     return result;
655      * }</pre>
656      *
657      * but is not constrained to execute sequentially.
658      *
659      * <p>The {@code identity} value must be an identity for the combiner
660      * function.  This means that for all {@code u}, {@code combiner(identity, u)}
661      * is equal to {@code u}.  Additionally, the {@code combiner} function
662      * must be compatible with the {@code accumulator} function; for all
663      * {@code u} and {@code t}, the following must hold:
664      * <pre>{@code
665      *     combiner.apply(u, accumulator.apply(identity, t)) == accumulator.apply(u, t)
666      * }</pre>
667      *
668      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
669      * operation</a>.
670      *
671      * @apiNote Many reductions using this form can be represented more simply
672      * by an explicit combination of {@code map} and {@code reduce} operations.
673      * The {@code accumulator} function acts as a fused mapper and accumulator,
674      * which can sometimes be more efficient than separate mapping and reduction,
675      * such as when knowing the previously reduced value allows you to avoid
676      * some computation.
677      *
678      * @param <U> The type of the result
679      * @param identity the identity value for the combiner function
680      * @param accumulator an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
681      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
682      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
683      *                    function for incorporating an additional element into a result
684      * @param combiner an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
685      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
686      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
687      *                    function for combining two values, which must be
688      *                    compatible with the accumulator function
689      * @return the result of the reduction
690      * @see #reduce(BinaryOperator)
691      * @see #reduce(Object, BinaryOperator)
692      */
reduce(U identity, BiFunction<U, ? super T, U> accumulator, BinaryOperator<U> combiner)693     <U> U reduce(U identity,
694                  BiFunction<U, ? super T, U> accumulator,
695                  BinaryOperator<U> combiner);
696 
697     /**
698      * Performs a <a href="package-summary.html#MutableReduction">mutable
699      * reduction</a> operation on the elements of this stream.  A mutable
700      * reduction is one in which the reduced value is a mutable result container,
701      * such as an {@code ArrayList}, and elements are incorporated by updating
702      * the state of the result rather than by replacing the result.  This
703      * produces a result equivalent to:
704      * <pre>{@code
705      *     R result = supplier.get();
706      *     for (T element : this stream)
707      *         accumulator.accept(result, element);
708      *     return result;
709      * }</pre>
710      *
711      * <p>Like {@link #reduce(Object, BinaryOperator)}, {@code collect} operations
712      * can be parallelized without requiring additional synchronization.
713      *
714      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
715      * operation</a>.
716      *
717      * @apiNote There are many existing classes in the JDK whose signatures are
718      * well-suited for use with method references as arguments to {@code collect()}.
719      * For example, the following will accumulate strings into an {@code ArrayList}:
720      * <pre>{@code
721      *     List<String> asList = stringStream.collect(ArrayList::new, ArrayList::add,
722      *                                                ArrayList::addAll);
723      * }</pre>
724      *
725      * <p>The following will take a stream of strings and concatenates them into a
726      * single string:
727      * <pre>{@code
728      *     String concat = stringStream.collect(StringBuilder::new, StringBuilder::append,
729      *                                          StringBuilder::append)
730      *                                 .toString();
731      * }</pre>
732      *
733      * @param <R> type of the result
734      * @param supplier a function that creates a new result container. For a
735      *                 parallel execution, this function may be called
736      *                 multiple times and must return a fresh value each time.
737      * @param accumulator an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
738      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
739      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
740      *                    function for incorporating an additional element into a result
741      * @param combiner an <a href="package-summary.html#Associativity">associative</a>,
742      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
743      *                    <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
744      *                    function for combining two values, which must be
745      *                    compatible with the accumulator function
746      * @return the result of the reduction
747      */
collect(Supplier<R> supplier, BiConsumer<R, ? super T> accumulator, BiConsumer<R, R> combiner)748     <R> R collect(Supplier<R> supplier,
749                   BiConsumer<R, ? super T> accumulator,
750                   BiConsumer<R, R> combiner);
751 
752     /**
753      * Performs a <a href="package-summary.html#MutableReduction">mutable
754      * reduction</a> operation on the elements of this stream using a
755      * {@code Collector}.  A {@code Collector}
756      * encapsulates the functions used as arguments to
757      * {@link #collect(Supplier, BiConsumer, BiConsumer)}, allowing for reuse of
758      * collection strategies and composition of collect operations such as
759      * multiple-level grouping or partitioning.
760      *
761      * <p>If the stream is parallel, and the {@code Collector}
762      * is {@link Collector.Characteristics#CONCURRENT concurrent}, and
763      * either the stream is unordered or the collector is
764      * {@link Collector.Characteristics#UNORDERED unordered},
765      * then a concurrent reduction will be performed (see {@link Collector} for
766      * details on concurrent reduction.)
767      *
768      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
769      * operation</a>.
770      *
771      * <p>When executed in parallel, multiple intermediate results may be
772      * instantiated, populated, and merged so as to maintain isolation of
773      * mutable data structures.  Therefore, even when executed in parallel
774      * with non-thread-safe data structures (such as {@code ArrayList}), no
775      * additional synchronization is needed for a parallel reduction.
776      *
777      * @apiNote
778      * The following will accumulate strings into an ArrayList:
779      * <pre>{@code
780      *     List<String> asList = stringStream.collect(Collectors.toList());
781      * }</pre>
782      *
783      * <p>The following will classify {@code Person} objects by city:
784      * <pre>{@code
785      *     Map<String, List<Person>> peopleByCity
786      *         = personStream.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getCity));
787      * }</pre>
788      *
789      * <p>The following will classify {@code Person} objects by state and city,
790      * cascading two {@code Collector}s together:
791      * <pre>{@code
792      *     Map<String, Map<String, List<Person>>> peopleByStateAndCity
793      *         = personStream.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getState,
794      *                                                      Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getCity)));
795      * }</pre>
796      *
797      * @param <R> the type of the result
798      * @param <A> the intermediate accumulation type of the {@code Collector}
799      * @param collector the {@code Collector} describing the reduction
800      * @return the result of the reduction
801      * @see #collect(Supplier, BiConsumer, BiConsumer)
802      * @see Collectors
803      */
collect(Collector<? super T, A, R> collector)804     <R, A> R collect(Collector<? super T, A, R> collector);
805 
806     /**
807      * Returns the minimum element of this stream according to the provided
808      * {@code Comparator}.  This is a special case of a
809      * <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a>.
810      *
811      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal operation</a>.
812      *
813      * @param comparator a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
814      *                   <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
815      *                   {@code Comparator} to compare elements of this stream
816      * @return an {@code Optional} describing the minimum element of this stream,
817      * or an empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty
818      * @throws NullPointerException if the minimum element is null
819      */
min(Comparator<? super T> comparator)820     Optional<T> min(Comparator<? super T> comparator);
821 
822     /**
823      * Returns the maximum element of this stream according to the provided
824      * {@code Comparator}.  This is a special case of a
825      * <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a>.
826      *
827      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal
828      * operation</a>.
829      *
830      * @param comparator a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
831      *                   <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
832      *                   {@code Comparator} to compare elements of this stream
833      * @return an {@code Optional} describing the maximum element of this stream,
834      * or an empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty
835      * @throws NullPointerException if the maximum element is null
836      */
max(Comparator<? super T> comparator)837     Optional<T> max(Comparator<? super T> comparator);
838 
839     /**
840      * Returns the count of elements in this stream.  This is a special case of
841      * a <a href="package-summary.html#Reduction">reduction</a> and is
842      * equivalent to:
843      * <pre>{@code
844      *     return mapToLong(e -> 1L).sum();
845      * }</pre>
846      *
847      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">terminal operation</a>.
848      *
849      * @return the count of elements in this stream
850      */
count()851     long count();
852 
853     /**
854      * Returns whether any elements of this stream match the provided
855      * predicate.  May not evaluate the predicate on all elements if not
856      * necessary for determining the result.  If the stream is empty then
857      * {@code false} is returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
858      *
859      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
860      * terminal operation</a>.
861      *
862      * @apiNote
863      * This method evaluates the <em>existential quantification</em> of the
864      * predicate over the elements of the stream (for some x P(x)).
865      *
866      * @param predicate a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
867      *                  <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
868      *                  predicate to apply to elements of this stream
869      * @return {@code true} if any elements of the stream match the provided
870      * predicate, otherwise {@code false}
871      */
anyMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)872     boolean anyMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate);
873 
874     /**
875      * Returns whether all elements of this stream match the provided predicate.
876      * May not evaluate the predicate on all elements if not necessary for
877      * determining the result.  If the stream is empty then {@code true} is
878      * returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
879      *
880      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
881      * terminal operation</a>.
882      *
883      * @apiNote
884      * This method evaluates the <em>universal quantification</em> of the
885      * predicate over the elements of the stream (for all x P(x)).  If the
886      * stream is empty, the quantification is said to be <em>vacuously
887      * satisfied</em> and is always {@code true} (regardless of P(x)).
888      *
889      * @param predicate a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
890      *                  <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
891      *                  predicate to apply to elements of this stream
892      * @return {@code true} if either all elements of the stream match the
893      * provided predicate or the stream is empty, otherwise {@code false}
894      */
allMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)895     boolean allMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate);
896 
897     /**
898      * Returns whether no elements of this stream match the provided predicate.
899      * May not evaluate the predicate on all elements if not necessary for
900      * determining the result.  If the stream is empty then {@code true} is
901      * returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
902      *
903      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
904      * terminal operation</a>.
905      *
906      * @apiNote
907      * This method evaluates the <em>universal quantification</em> of the
908      * negated predicate over the elements of the stream (for all x ~P(x)).  If
909      * the stream is empty, the quantification is said to be vacuously satisfied
910      * and is always {@code true}, regardless of P(x).
911      *
912      * @param predicate a <a href="package-summary.html#NonInterference">non-interfering</a>,
913      *                  <a href="package-summary.html#Statelessness">stateless</a>
914      *                  predicate to apply to elements of this stream
915      * @return {@code true} if either no elements of the stream match the
916      * provided predicate or the stream is empty, otherwise {@code false}
917      */
noneMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)918     boolean noneMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate);
919 
920     /**
921      * Returns an {@link Optional} describing the first element of this stream,
922      * or an empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty.  If the stream has
923      * no encounter order, then any element may be returned.
924      *
925      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
926      * terminal operation</a>.
927      *
928      * @return an {@code Optional} describing the first element of this stream,
929      * or an empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty
930      * @throws NullPointerException if the element selected is null
931      */
findFirst()932     Optional<T> findFirst();
933 
934     /**
935      * Returns an {@link Optional} describing some element of the stream, or an
936      * empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty.
937      *
938      * <p>This is a <a href="package-summary.html#StreamOps">short-circuiting
939      * terminal operation</a>.
940      *
941      * <p>The behavior of this operation is explicitly nondeterministic; it is
942      * free to select any element in the stream.  This is to allow for maximal
943      * performance in parallel operations; the cost is that multiple invocations
944      * on the same source may not return the same result.  (If a stable result
945      * is desired, use {@link #findFirst()} instead.)
946      *
947      * @return an {@code Optional} describing some element of this stream, or an
948      * empty {@code Optional} if the stream is empty
949      * @throws NullPointerException if the element selected is null
950      * @see #findFirst()
951      */
findAny()952     Optional<T> findAny();
953 
954     // Static factories
955 
956     /**
957      * Returns a builder for a {@code Stream}.
958      *
959      * @param <T> type of elements
960      * @return a stream builder
961      */
builder()962     public static<T> Builder<T> builder() {
963         return new Streams.StreamBuilderImpl<>();
964     }
965 
966     /**
967      * Returns an empty sequential {@code Stream}.
968      *
969      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
970      * @return an empty sequential stream
971      */
empty()972     public static<T> Stream<T> empty() {
973         return StreamSupport.stream(Spliterators.<T>emptySpliterator(), false);
974     }
975 
976     /**
977      * Returns a sequential {@code Stream} containing a single element.
978      *
979      * @param t the single element
980      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
981      * @return a singleton sequential stream
982      */
of(T t)983     public static<T> Stream<T> of(T t) {
984         return StreamSupport.stream(new Streams.StreamBuilderImpl<>(t), false);
985     }
986 
987     /**
988      * Returns a sequential ordered stream whose elements are the specified values.
989      *
990      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
991      * @param values the elements of the new stream
992      * @return the new stream
993      */
994     @SafeVarargs
995     @SuppressWarnings("varargs") // Creating a stream from an array is safe
of(T... values)996     public static<T> Stream<T> of(T... values) {
997         return Arrays.stream(values);
998     }
999 
1000     /**
1001      * Returns an infinite sequential ordered {@code Stream} produced by iterative
1002      * application of a function {@code f} to an initial element {@code seed},
1003      * producing a {@code Stream} consisting of {@code seed}, {@code f(seed)},
1004      * {@code f(f(seed))}, etc.
1005      *
1006      * <p>The first element (position {@code 0}) in the {@code Stream} will be
1007      * the provided {@code seed}.  For {@code n > 0}, the element at position
1008      * {@code n}, will be the result of applying the function {@code f} to the
1009      * element at position {@code n - 1}.
1010      *
1011      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
1012      * @param seed the initial element
1013      * @param f a function to be applied to to the previous element to produce
1014      *          a new element
1015      * @return a new sequential {@code Stream}
1016      */
iterate(final T seed, final UnaryOperator<T> f)1017     public static<T> Stream<T> iterate(final T seed, final UnaryOperator<T> f) {
1018         Objects.requireNonNull(f);
1019         final Iterator<T> iterator = new Iterator<T>() {
1020             @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
1021             T t = (T) Streams.NONE;
1022 
1023             @Override
1024             public boolean hasNext() {
1025                 return true;
1026             }
1027 
1028             @Override
1029             public T next() {
1030                 return t = (t == Streams.NONE) ? seed : f.apply(t);
1031             }
1032         };
1033         return StreamSupport.stream(Spliterators.spliteratorUnknownSize(
1034                 iterator,
1035                 Spliterator.ORDERED | Spliterator.IMMUTABLE), false);
1036     }
1037 
1038     /**
1039      * Returns an infinite sequential unordered stream where each element is
1040      * generated by the provided {@code Supplier}.  This is suitable for
1041      * generating constant streams, streams of random elements, etc.
1042      *
1043      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
1044      * @param s the {@code Supplier} of generated elements
1045      * @return a new infinite sequential unordered {@code Stream}
1046      */
generate(Supplier<T> s)1047     public static<T> Stream<T> generate(Supplier<T> s) {
1048         Objects.requireNonNull(s);
1049         return StreamSupport.stream(
1050                 new StreamSpliterators.InfiniteSupplyingSpliterator.OfRef<>(Long.MAX_VALUE, s), false);
1051     }
1052 
1053     /**
1054      * Creates a lazily concatenated stream whose elements are all the
1055      * elements of the first stream followed by all the elements of the
1056      * second stream.  The resulting stream is ordered if both
1057      * of the input streams are ordered, and parallel if either of the input
1058      * streams is parallel.  When the resulting stream is closed, the close
1059      * handlers for both input streams are invoked.
1060      *
1061      * @implNote
1062      * Use caution when constructing streams from repeated concatenation.
1063      * Accessing an element of a deeply concatenated stream can result in deep
1064      * call chains, or even {@code StackOverflowException}.
1065      *
1066      * @param <T> The type of stream elements
1067      * @param a the first stream
1068      * @param b the second stream
1069      * @return the concatenation of the two input streams
1070      */
concat(Stream<? extends T> a, Stream<? extends T> b)1071     public static <T> Stream<T> concat(Stream<? extends T> a, Stream<? extends T> b) {
1072         Objects.requireNonNull(a);
1073         Objects.requireNonNull(b);
1074 
1075         @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
1076         Spliterator<T> split = new Streams.ConcatSpliterator.OfRef<>(
1077                 (Spliterator<T>) a.spliterator(), (Spliterator<T>) b.spliterator());
1078         Stream<T> stream = StreamSupport.stream(split, a.isParallel() || b.isParallel());
1079         return stream.onClose(Streams.composedClose(a, b));
1080     }
1081 
1082     /**
1083      * A mutable builder for a {@code Stream}.  This allows the creation of a
1084      * {@code Stream} by generating elements individually and adding them to the
1085      * {@code Builder} (without the copying overhead that comes from using
1086      * an {@code ArrayList} as a temporary buffer.)
1087      *
1088      * <p>A stream builder has a lifecycle, which starts in a building
1089      * phase, during which elements can be added, and then transitions to a built
1090      * phase, after which elements may not be added.  The built phase begins
1091      * when the {@link #build()} method is called, which creates an ordered
1092      * {@code Stream} whose elements are the elements that were added to the stream
1093      * builder, in the order they were added.
1094      *
1095      * @param <T> the type of stream elements
1096      * @see Stream#builder()
1097      * @since 1.8
1098      */
1099     public interface Builder<T> extends Consumer<T> {
1100 
1101         /**
1102          * Adds an element to the stream being built.
1103          *
1104          * @throws IllegalStateException if the builder has already transitioned to
1105          * the built state
1106          */
1107         @Override
accept(T t)1108         void accept(T t);
1109 
1110         /**
1111          * Adds an element to the stream being built.
1112          *
1113          * @implSpec
1114          * The default implementation behaves as if:
1115          * <pre>{@code
1116          *     accept(t)
1117          *     return this;
1118          * }</pre>
1119          *
1120          * @param t the element to add
1121          * @return {@code this} builder
1122          * @throws IllegalStateException if the builder has already transitioned to
1123          * the built state
1124          */
add(T t)1125         default Builder<T> add(T t) {
1126             accept(t);
1127             return this;
1128         }
1129 
1130         /**
1131          * Builds the stream, transitioning this builder to the built state.
1132          * An {@code IllegalStateException} is thrown if there are further attempts
1133          * to operate on the builder after it has entered the built state.
1134          *
1135          * @return the built stream
1136          * @throws IllegalStateException if the builder has already transitioned to
1137          * the built state
1138          */
build()1139         Stream<T> build();
1140 
1141     }
1142 }
1143