Return type | Name and parameters |
---|---|
boolean
|
addAll(Iterable items)
Adds all items from the iterable to the Collection. |
boolean
|
addAll(Object[] items)
Modifies the collection by adding all of the elements in the specified array to the collection. |
boolean
|
addAll(Iterator items)
Adds all items from the iterator to the Collection. |
boolean
|
asBoolean()
Coerce a collection instance to a boolean value. |
Collection
|
asImmutable()
A convenience method for creating an immutable Collection. |
Collection
|
asSynchronized()
A convenience method for creating a synchronized Collection. |
Object
|
asType(Class clazz)
Converts the given collection to another type. |
List
|
collect()
Iterates through this collection transforming each entry into a new value using Closure.IDENTITY as a transformer, basically returning a list of items copied from the original collection. |
List
|
collect(Closure transform)
Iterates through this collection transforming each entry into a new value using the transform closure
returning a list of transformed values.
|
Collection
|
collect(Collection collector, Closure transform)
Iterates through this collection transforming each value into a new value using the transform closure
and adding it to the supplied collector .
|
List
|
collectNested(Closure transform)
Recursively iterates through this collection transforming each non-Collection value into a new value using the closure as a transformer. |
Collection
|
each(Closure closure)
Iterates through an Collection, passing each item to the given closure. |
Collection
|
eachWithIndex(Closure closure)
Iterates through an Collection, passing each item and the item's index (a counter starting at zero) to the given closure. |
Object
|
find()
Finds the first item matching the IDENTITY Closure (i.e. matching Groovy truth). |
Object
|
find(Closure closure)
Finds the first value matching the closure condition. |
Collection
|
findAll()
Finds the items matching the IDENTITY Closure (i.e. matching Groovy truth). |
Collection
|
findAll(Closure closure)
Finds all values matching the closure condition. |
Object
|
findResult(Closure closure)
Iterates through the collection calling the given closure for each item but stopping once the first non-null result is found and returning that result. |
Object
|
findResult(Object defaultResult, Closure closure)
Iterates through the collection calling the given closure for each item but stopping once the first non-null result is found and returning that result. |
Collection
|
flatten()
Flatten a Collection. |
List
|
getAt(String property)
Support the subscript operator for Collection. |
IntRange
|
getIndices()
Returns indices of the collection. |
Collection
|
grep()
Iterates over the collection returning each element that matches using the IDENTITY Closure as a filter - effectively returning all elements which satisfy Groovy truth. |
Collection
|
grep(Object filter)
Iterates over the collection of items and returns each item that matches the given filter - calling the Object#isCase(java.lang.Object)
method used by switch statements.
|
Object
|
inject(Closure closure)
Performs the same function as the version of inject that takes an initial value, but uses the head of the Collection as the initial value, and iterates over the tail. |
Object
|
inject(Object initialValue, Closure closure)
Iterates through the given Collection, passing in the initial value to the 2-arg closure along with the first item. |
Collection
|
intersect(Collection right)
Create a Collection composed of the intersection of both collections. |
boolean
|
isCase(Object switchValue)
'Case' implementation for collections which tests if the 'switch' operand is contained in any of the 'case' values. |
Collection
|
leftShift(Object value)
Overloads the left shift operator to provide an easy way to append objects to a Collection. |
Collection
|
minus(Collection removeMe)
Create a new Collection composed of the elements of the first Collection minus every occurrence of elements of the given Collection. |
Collection
|
plus(Iterable right)
Create a Collection as a union of a Collection and an Iterable. |
Collection
|
plus(Object right)
Create a collection as a union of a Collection and an Object. |
Collection
|
plus(Collection right)
Create a Collection as a union of two collections. |
boolean
|
removeAll(Closure condition)
Modifies this collection by removing the elements that are matched according to the specified closure condition. |
boolean
|
removeAll(Object[] items)
Modifies this collection by removing its elements that are contained within the specified object array. |
boolean
|
removeElement(Object o)
Modifies this collection by removing a single instance of the specified element from this collection, if it is present. |
boolean
|
retainAll(Closure condition)
Modifies this collection so that it retains only its elements that are matched according to the specified closure condition. |
boolean
|
retainAll(Object[] items)
Modifies this collection so that it retains only its elements that are contained in the specified array. |
Collection
|
split(Closure closure)
Splits all items into two collections based on the closure condition. |
String
|
toListString()
Returns the string representation of the given list. |
String
|
toListString(int maxSize)
Returns the string representation of the given list. |
Set
|
toSet()
Convert a Collection to a Set. |
Collection
|
unique()
Modifies this collection to remove all duplicated items, using the default comparator. |
Collection
|
unique(boolean mutate)
Remove all duplicates from a given Collection using the default comparator. |
Collection
|
unique(boolean mutate, Closure closure)
A convenience method for making a collection unique using a Closure to determine duplicate (equal) items. |
Collection
|
unique(boolean mutate, Comparator comparator)
Remove all duplicates from a given Collection. |
Collection
|
unique(Closure closure)
A convenience method for making a collection unique using a Closure to determine duplicate (equal) items. |
Collection
|
unique(Comparator comparator)
Remove all duplicates from a given Collection. |
any
, asCollection
, asList
, collate
, collate
, collate
, collate
, collectEntries
, collectEntries
, collectEntries
, collectEntries
, collectMany
, collectMany
, collectNested
, collectNested
, combinations
, combinations
, contains
, containsAll
, count
, count
, countBy
, disjoint
, drop
, dropRight
, dropWhile
, each
, eachCombination
, eachPermutation
, eachWithIndex
, every
, findResults
, first
, flatten
, flatten
, getAt
, groupBy
, groupBy
, groupBy
, head
, indexed
, indexed
, init
, intersect
, join
, last
, max
, max
, max
, min
, min
, min
, minus
, minus
, multiply
, permutations
, permutations
, plus
, plus
, size
, sort
, sort
, sort
, sort
, sort
, sum
, sum
, sum
, sum
, tail
, take
, takeRight
, takeWhile
, toList
, toSet
, toSorted
, toSorted
, toSorted
, toSpreadMap
, toUnique
, toUnique
, toUnique
, withIndex
, withIndex
Adds all items from the iterable to the Collection.
items
- the items to addModifies the collection by adding all of the elements in the specified array to the collection.
The behavior of this operation is undefined if
the specified array is modified while the operation is in progress.
See also plus
or the '+' operator if wanting to produce a new collection
containing additional items but while leaving the original collection unchanged.
items
- array containing elements to be added to this collectionAdds all items from the iterator to the Collection.
items
- the items to addCoerce a collection instance to a boolean value. A collection is coerced to false if it's empty, and to true otherwise.
assert [1,2].asBoolean() == true
assert [].asBoolean() == false
A convenience method for creating an immutable Collection.
def mutable = [1,2,3] def immutable = mutable.asImmutable() mutable << 4 try { immutable << 4 assert false } catch (UnsupportedOperationException) { assert true }
A convenience method for creating a synchronized Collection.
Converts the given collection to another type. A default concrete type is used for List, Set, or SortedSet. If the given type has a constructor taking a collection, that is used. Otherwise, the call is deferred to {link #asType(Object,Class)}. If this collection is already of the given type, the same instance is returned.
clazz
- the desired classIterates through this collection transforming each entry into a new value using Closure.IDENTITY as a transformer, basically returning a list of items copied from the original collection.
assert [1,2,3] == [1,2,3].collect()
Iterates through this collection transforming each entry into a new value using the transform
closure
returning a list of transformed values.
assert [2,4,6] == [1,2,3].collect { it * 2 }
transform
- the closure used to transform each item of the collectionIterates through this collection transforming each value into a new value using the transform
closure
and adding it to the supplied collector
.
assert [1,2,3] as HashSet == [2,4,5,6].collect(new HashSet()) { (int)(it / 2) }
collector
- the Collection to which the transformed values are addedtransform
- the closure used to transform each item of the collectionRecursively iterates through this collection transforming each non-Collection value into a new value using the closure as a transformer. Returns a potentially nested list of transformed values.
assert [2,[4,6],[8],[]] == [1,[2,3],[4],[]].collectNested { it * 2 }
transform
- the closure used to transform each item of the collectionIterates through an Collection, passing each item to the given closure.
closure
- the closure applied on each element foundIterates through an Collection, passing each item and the item's index (a counter starting at zero) to the given closure.
closure
- a Closure to operate on each itemFinds the first item matching the IDENTITY Closure (i.e. matching Groovy truth).
Example:
def items = [null, 0, 0.0, false, '', [], 42, 43] assert items.find() == 42
Finds the first value matching the closure condition. Example:
def list = [1,2,3] assert 2 == list.find { it > 1 }
closure
- a closure conditionFinds the items matching the IDENTITY Closure (i.e. matching Groovy truth).
Example:
def items = [1, 2, 0, false, true, '', 'foo', [], [4, 5], null] assert items.findAll() == [1, 2, true, 'foo', [4, 5]]
Finds all values matching the closure condition.
assert [2,4] == [1,2,3,4].findAll { it % 2 == 0 }
closure
- a closure conditionIterates through the collection calling the given closure for each item but stopping once the first non-null result is found and returning that result. If all results are null, null is returned.
Example:
def list = [1,2,3] assert "Found 2" == list.findResult { it > 1 ? "Found $it" : null }
closure
- a closure that returns a non-null value when processing should stop and a value should be returnedIterates through the collection calling the given closure for each item but stopping once the first non-null result is found and returning that result. If all are null, the defaultResult is returned.
Examples:
def list = [1,2,3] assert "Found 2" == list.findResult("default") { it > 1 ? "Found $it" : null } assert "default" == list.findResult("default") { it > 3 ? "Found $it" : null }
defaultResult
- an Object that should be returned if all closure results are nullclosure
- a closure that returns a non-null value when processing should stop and a value should be returnedFlatten a Collection. This Collection and any nested arrays or collections have their contents (recursively) added to the new collection.
assert [1,2,3,4,5] == [1,[2,3],[[4]],[],5].flatten()
Support the subscript operator for Collection.
assert [String, Long, Integer] == ["a",5L,2]["class"]
property
- a StringReturns indices of the collection.
Example:
assert 0..2 == [5, 6, 7].indices
Iterates over the collection returning each element that matches using the IDENTITY Closure as a filter - effectively returning all elements which satisfy Groovy truth.
Example:
def items = [1, 2, 0, false, true, '', 'foo', [], [4, 5], null] assert items.grep() == [1, 2, true, 'foo', [4, 5]]
Iterates over the collection of items and returns each item that matches
the given filter - calling the Object#isCase(java.lang.Object)
method used by switch statements. This method can be used with different
kinds of filters like regular expressions, classes, ranges etc.
Example:
def list = ['a', 'b', 'aa', 'bc', 3, 4.5] assert list.grep( ~/a+/ ) == ['a', 'aa'] assert list.grep( ~/../ ) == ['aa', 'bc'] assert list.grep( Number ) == [ 3, 4.5 ] assert list.grep{ it.toString().size() == 1 } == [ 'a', 'b', 3 ]
filter
- the filter to perform on each element of the collection (using the Object#isCase(java.lang.Object) method)Performs the same function as the version of inject that takes an initial value, but uses the head of the Collection as the initial value, and iterates over the tail.
assert 1 * 2 * 3 * 4 == [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ].inject { acc, val -> acc * val } assert ['b'] == [['a','b'], ['b','c'], ['d','b']].inject { acc, val -> acc.intersect( val ) } LinkedHashSet set = [ 't', 'i', 'm' ] assert 'tim' == set.inject { a, b -> a + b }
closure
- a closureIterates through the given Collection, passing in the initial value to the 2-arg closure along with the first item. The result is passed back (injected) into the closure along with the second item. The new result is injected back into the closure along with the third item and so on until the entire collection has been used. Also known as foldLeft or reduce in functional parlance. Examples:
assert 1*1*2*3*4 == [1,2,3,4].inject(1) { acc, val -> acc * val } assert 0+1+2+3+4 == [1,2,3,4].inject(0) { acc, val -> acc + val } assert 'The quick brown fox' == ['quick', 'brown', 'fox'].inject('The') { acc, val -> acc + ' ' + val } assert 'bat' == ['rat', 'bat', 'cat'].inject('zzz') { min, next -> next < min ? next : min } def max = { a, b -> [a, b].max() } def animals = ['bat', 'rat', 'cat'] assert 'rat' == animals.inject('aaa', max)Visual representation of the last example above:
initVal animals[0] v v max('aaa', 'bat') => 'bat' animals[1] v v max('bat', 'rat') => 'rat' animals[2] v v max('rat', 'cat') => 'rat'
initialValue
- some initial valueclosure
- a closureCreate a Collection composed of the intersection of both collections. Any elements that exist in both collections are added to the resultant collection.
assert [4,5] == [1,2,3,4,5].intersect([4,5,6,7,8])
right
- a Collection'Case' implementation for collections which tests if the 'switch' operand is contained in any of the 'case' values. For example:
switch( 3 ) { case [1,3,5]: assert true break default: assert false }
switchValue
- the switch valueOverloads the left shift operator to provide an easy way to append objects to a Collection.
def list = [1,2] list << 3 assert list == [1,2,3]
value
- an Object to be added to the collection.Create a new Collection composed of the elements of the first Collection minus every occurrence of elements of the given Collection.
assert [1, "a", true, true, false, 5.3] - [true, 5.3] == [1, "a", false]
removeMe
- a Collection of elements to removeCreate a Collection as a union of a Collection and an Iterable. If the left collection is a Set, then the returned collection will be a Set otherwise a List. This operation will always create a new object for the result, while the operands remain unchanged.
right
- the right IterableCreate a collection as a union of a Collection and an Object. If the collection is a Set, then the returned collection will be a Set otherwise a List. This operation will always create a new object for the result, while the operands remain unchanged.
assert [1,2,3] == [1,2] + 3
right
- an object to add/appendCreate a Collection as a union of two collections. If the left collection is a Set, then the returned collection will be a Set otherwise a List. This operation will always create a new object for the result, while the operands remain unchanged.
assert [1,2,3,4] == [1,2] + [3,4]
right
- the right CollectionModifies this collection by removing the elements that are matched according
to the specified closure condition.
See also findAll
and grep
when wanting to produce a new list
containing items which don't match some criteria while leaving the original collection unchanged.
condition
- a closure conditionModifies this collection by removing its elements that are contained
within the specified object array.
See also findAll
and grep
when wanting to produce a new list
containing items which don't match some criteria while leaving the original collection unchanged.
items
- array containing elements to be removed from this collectionModifies this collection by removing a single instance of the specified element from this collection, if it is present. Essentially an alias for Collection#remove(Object) but with no ambiguity for Collection<Integer>.
Example:def list = [1, 2, 3, 2] list.removeElement(2) assert [1, 3, 2] == list
o
- element to be removed from this collection, if presentModifies this collection so that it retains only its elements
that are matched according to the specified closure condition. In other words,
removes from this collection all of its elements that don't match.
See also findAll
and grep
when wanting to produce a new list
containing items which match some criteria but leaving the original collection unchanged.
condition
- a closure conditionModifies this collection so that it retains only its elements that are contained
in the specified array. In other words, removes from this collection all of
its elements that are not contained in the specified array.
See also grep
and findAll
when wanting to produce a new list
containing items which match some specified items but leaving the original collection unchanged.
items
- array containing elements to be retained from this collectionSplits all items into two collections based on the closure condition. The first list contains all items which match the closure expression. The second list all those that don't.
Example usage:
assert [[2,4],[1,3]] == [1,2,3,4].split { it % 2 == 0 }
closure
- a closure conditionReturns the string representation of the given list. The string
displays the contents of the list, similar to a list literal, i.e.
[1, 2, a]
.
Returns the string representation of the given list. The string
displays the contents of the list, similar to a list literal, i.e.
[1, 2, a]
.
maxSize
- stop after approximately this many characters and append '...'Convert a Collection to a Set. Always returns a new Set even if the Collection is already a Set.
Example usage:
def result = [1, 2, 2, 2, 3].toSet() assert result instanceof Set assert result == [1, 2, 3] as Set
Modifies this collection to remove all duplicated items, using the default comparator.
assert [1,3] == [1,3,3].unique()
Remove all duplicates from a given Collection using the default comparator. If mutate is true, it works by modifying the original object (and also returning it). If mutate is false, a new collection is returned leaving the original unchanged.
assert [1,3] == [1,3,3].unique()
def orig = [1, 3, 2, 3] def uniq = orig.unique(false) assert orig == [1, 3, 2, 3] assert uniq == [1, 3, 2]
mutate
- false will cause a new list containing unique items from the collection to be created, true will mutate collections in placeA convenience method for making a collection unique using a Closure to determine duplicate (equal) items. If mutate is true, it works on the receiver object and returns it. If mutate is false, a new collection is returned.
If the closure takes a single parameter, each element from the Collection will be passed to the closure. The closure should return a value used for comparison (either using Comparable#compareTo(java.lang.Object) or Object#equals(java.lang.Object)). If the closure takes two parameters, two items from the collection will be passed as arguments, and the closure should return an int value (with 0 indicating the items are not unique).
def orig = [1, 3, 4, 5] def uniq = orig.unique(false) { it % 2 } assert orig == [1, 3, 4, 5] assert uniq == [1, 4]
def orig = [2, 3, 3, 4] def uniq = orig.unique(false) { a, b -> a <=> b } assert orig == [2, 3, 3, 4] assert uniq == [2, 3, 4]
mutate
- false will always cause a new list to be created, true will mutate lists in placeclosure
- a 1 or 2 arg Closure used to determine unique itemsRemove all duplicates from a given Collection. If mutate is true, it works on the original object (and also returns it). If mutate is false, a new collection is returned. The order of members in the Collection are compared by the given Comparator. For each duplicate, the first member which is returned by the given Collection's iterator is retained, but all other ones are removed. The given Collection's original order is preserved.
class Person { def fname, lname String toString() { return fname + " " + lname } } class PersonComparator implements Comparator { int compare(Object o1, Object o2) { Person p1 = (Person) o1 Person p2 = (Person) o2 if (p1.lname != p2.lname) return p1.lname.compareTo(p2.lname) else return p1.fname.compareTo(p2.fname) } boolean equals(Object obj) { return this.equals(obj) } } Person a = new Person(fname:"John", lname:"Taylor") Person b = new Person(fname:"Clark", lname:"Taylor") Person c = new Person(fname:"Tom", lname:"Cruz") Person d = new Person(fname:"Clark", lname:"Taylor") def list = [a, b, c, d] List list2 = list.unique(false, new PersonComparator()) assert( list2 != list && list2 == [a, b, c] )
mutate
- false will always cause a new collection to be created, true will mutate collections in placecomparator
- a ComparatorA convenience method for making a collection unique using a Closure to determine duplicate (equal) items.
If the closure takes a single parameter, the argument passed will be each element, and the closure should return a value used for comparison (either using Comparable#compareTo(java.lang.Object) or Object#equals(java.lang.Object)). If the closure takes two parameters, two items from the collection will be passed as arguments, and the closure should return an int value (with 0 indicating the items are not unique).
assert [1,4] == [1,3,4,5].unique { it % 2 }
assert [2,3,4] == [2,3,3,4].unique { a, b -> a <=> b }
closure
- a 1 or 2 arg Closure used to determine unique itemsRemove all duplicates from a given Collection. Works on the original object (and also returns it). The order of members in the Collection are compared by the given Comparator. For each duplicate, the first member which is returned by the given Collection's iterator is retained, but all other ones are removed. The given Collection's original order is preserved.
class Person { def fname, lname String toString() { return fname + " " + lname } } class PersonComparator implements Comparator { int compare(Object o1, Object o2) { Person p1 = (Person) o1 Person p2 = (Person) o2 if (p1.lname != p2.lname) return p1.lname.compareTo(p2.lname) else return p1.fname.compareTo(p2.fname) } boolean equals(Object obj) { return this.equals(obj) } } Person a = new Person(fname:"John", lname:"Taylor") Person b = new Person(fname:"Clark", lname:"Taylor") Person c = new Person(fname:"Tom", lname:"Cruz") Person d = new Person(fname:"Clark", lname:"Taylor") def list = [a, b, c, d] List list2 = list.unique(new PersonComparator()) assert( list2 == list && list == [a, b, c] )
comparator
- a Comparator