Package groovy.lang
Interface Range<T extends Comparable>
- All Superinterfaces:
Collection<T>
,Iterable<T>
,List<T>
- All Known Implementing Classes:
EmptyRange
,IntRange
,NumberRange
,ObjectRange
A Range represents the list of discrete items between some starting (or
from
)
value and working up towards some ending (or to
) value.
For a reverse range, the list is obtained by starting at the to
value and
working down towards the from
value.
The concept of working up and working down is dependent on the range implementation.
In the general case, working up involves successive calls to the first item's next()
method while working down involves calling the previous()
method. Optimized
numerical ranges may apply numeric addition or subtraction of some numerical step size.
Particular range implementations may also support the notion of inclusivity
and exclusivity with respect to the ending value in the range.
E.g. 1..3 == [1, 2, 3]
; but 1..<3 == [1, 2]
.
In general, the second boundary may not be contained in the range,
and a..b
may produce a different set of elements than (b..a).reversed()
.
E.g. 1..2.5 == [1, 2]
; but 2.5..1 == [2.5, 1.5]
.
Implementations can be memory efficient by storing just the from
and to
boundary
values rather than eagerly creating all discrete items in the conceptual list. The actual discrete items
can be lazily calculated on an as needed basis (e.g. when calling methods from the java.util.List
interface or the additional step
methods in the Range
interface).
In addition to the methods related to a Range's "discrete items" abstraction, there is a method,
containsWithinBounds
which, for numerical ranges, allows checking within the continuous
interval between the Range's boundary values.-
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionboolean
Indicates whether an object is greater than or equal to thefrom
value for the range and less than or equal to theto
value.getFrom()
The lower value in the range.getTo()
The upper value in the range.inspect()
boolean
Indicates whether this is a reverse range which iterates backwards starting from the to value and ending on the from valuestep
(int step) Forms a list by stepping through the range by the indicated interval.void
Steps through the range, calling a closure for each item.Methods inherited from interface java.util.Collection
parallelStream, removeIf, stream, toArray
Methods inherited from interface java.util.List
add, add, addAll, addAll, clear, contains, containsAll, equals, get, hashCode, indexOf, isEmpty, iterator, lastIndexOf, listIterator, listIterator, remove, remove, removeAll, replaceAll, retainAll, set, size, sort, spliterator, subList, toArray, toArray
-
Method Details
-
getFrom
T getFrom()The lower value in the range.- Returns:
- the lower value in the range.
-
getTo
T getTo()The upper value in the range.- Returns:
- the upper value in the range
-
isReverse
boolean isReverse()Indicates whether this is a reverse range which iterates backwards starting from the to value and ending on the from value- Returns:
true
if this is a reverse range
-
containsWithinBounds
Indicates whether an object is greater than or equal to thefrom
value for the range and less than or equal to theto
value.This may be true even for values not contained in the range. Example: from = 1.5, to = 3, next() increments by 1 containsWithinBounds(2) == true contains(2) == false
- Parameters:
o
- the object to check against the boundaries of the range- Returns:
true
if the object is between the from and to values
-
step
Steps through the range, calling a closure for each item.- Parameters:
step
- the amount by which to step. If negative, steps through the range backwards.closure
- theClosure
to call
-
step
Forms a list by stepping through the range by the indicated interval.- Parameters:
step
- the amount by which to step. If negative, steps through the range backwards.- Returns:
- the list formed by stepping through the range by the indicated interval.
-
inspect
String inspect()
-