Spliterator
  public
  
  
  
  interface
  Spliterator
  
  
  
| java.util.Spliterator<T> | 
An object for traversing and partitioning elements of a source.  The source
 of elements covered by a Spliterator could be, for example, an array, a
 Collection, an IO channel, or a generator function.
 
A Spliterator may traverse elements individually (tryAdvance()) or sequentially in bulk
 (forEachRemaining()).
 
A Spliterator may also partition off some of its elements (using
 trySplit()) as another Spliterator, to be used in
 possibly-parallel operations.  Operations using a Spliterator that
 cannot split, or does so in a highly imbalanced or inefficient
 manner, are unlikely to benefit from parallelism.  Traversal
 and splitting exhaust elements; each Spliterator is useful for only a single
 bulk computation.
 
A Spliterator also reports a set of characteristics() of its
 structure, source, and elements from among ORDERED,
 DISTINCT, SORTED, SIZED, NONNULL,
 IMMUTABLE, CONCURRENT, and SUBSIZED. These may
 be employed by Spliterator clients to control, specialize or simplify
 computation.  For example, a Spliterator for a Collection would
 report SIZED, a Spliterator for a Set would report
 DISTINCT, and a Spliterator for a SortedSet would also
 report SORTED.  Characteristics are reported as a simple unioned bit
 set.
 Some characteristics additionally constrain method behavior; for example if
 ORDERED, traversal methods must conform to their documented ordering.
 New characteristics may be defined in the future, so implementors should not
 assign meanings to unlisted values.
 
A Spliterator that does not report IMMUTABLE or
 CONCURRENT is expected to have a documented policy concerning:
 when the spliterator binds to the element source; and detection of
 structural interference of the element source detected after binding.  A
 late-binding Spliterator binds to the source of elements at the
 point of first traversal, first split, or first query for estimated size,
 rather than at the time the Spliterator is created.  A Spliterator that is
 not late-binding binds to the source of elements at the point of
 construction or first invocation of any method.  Modifications made to the
 source prior to binding are reflected when the Spliterator is traversed.
 After binding a Spliterator should, on a best-effort basis, throw
 ConcurrentModificationException if structural interference is
 detected.  Spliterators that do this are called fail-fast.  The
 bulk traversal method (forEachRemaining()) of a
 Spliterator may optimize traversal and check for structural interference
 after all elements have been traversed, rather than checking per-element and
 failing immediately.
 
Spliterators can provide an estimate of the number of remaining elements
 via the estimateSize() method.  Ideally, as reflected in characteristic
 SIZED, this value corresponds exactly to the number of elements
 that would be encountered in a successful traversal.  However, even when not
 exactly known, an estimated value may still be useful to operations
 being performed on the source, such as helping to determine whether it is
 preferable to split further or traverse the remaining elements sequentially.
 
Despite their obvious utility in parallel algorithms, spliterators are not
 expected to be thread-safe; instead, implementations of parallel algorithms
 using spliterators should ensure that the spliterator is only used by one
 thread at a time.  This is generally easy to attain via serial
 thread-confinement, which often is a natural consequence of typical
 parallel algorithms that work by recursive decomposition.  A thread calling
 trySplit() may hand over the returned Spliterator to another thread,
 which in turn may traverse or further split that Spliterator.  The behaviour
 of splitting and traversal is undefined if two or more threads operate
 concurrently on the same spliterator.  If the original thread hands a
 spliterator off to another thread for processing, it is best if that handoff
 occurs before any elements are consumed with tryAdvance(), as certain guarantees (such as the accuracy of
 estimateSize() for SIZED spliterators) are only valid before
 traversal has begun.
 
Primitive subtype specializations of Spliterator are provided for
 int, long, and double values.
 The subtype default implementations of
 Spliterator.tryAdvance(java.util.function.Consumer)
 and Spliterator.forEachRemaining(java.util.function.Consumer) box
 primitive values to instances of their corresponding wrapper class.  Such
 boxing may undermine any performance advantages gained by using the primitive
 specializations.  To avoid boxing, the corresponding primitive-based methods
 should be used.  For example,
 Spliterator.OfInt.tryAdvance(java.util.function.IntConsumer)
 and Spliterator.OfInt.forEachRemaining(java.util.function.IntConsumer)
 should be used in preference to
 Spliterator.OfInt.tryAdvance(java.util.function.Consumer) and
 Spliterator.OfInt.forEachRemaining(java.util.function.Consumer).
 Traversal of primitive values using boxing-based methods
 tryAdvance() and
 forEachRemaining()
 does not affect the order in which the values, transformed to boxed values,
 are encountered.
See also:
Summary
| Nested classes | |
|---|---|
| 
        
        
        
        
        interface | Spliterator.OfDoubleA Spliterator specialized for  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        interface | Spliterator.OfIntA Spliterator specialized for  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        interface | Spliterator.OfLongA Spliterator specialized for  | 
| 
        
        
        
        
        interface | Spliterator.OfPrimitive<T, T_CONS, T_SPLITR extends OfPrimitive<T, T_CONS, T_SPLITR>>A Spliterator specialized for primitive values. | 
| Constants | |
|---|---|
| int | CONCURRENTCharacteristic value signifying that the element source may be safely concurrently modified (allowing additions, replacements, and/or removals) by multiple threads without external synchronization. | 
| int | DISTINCTCharacteristic value signifying that, for each pair of
 encountered elements  | 
| int | IMMUTABLECharacteristic value signifying that the element source cannot be structurally modified; that is, elements cannot be added, replaced, or removed, so such changes cannot occur during traversal. | 
| int | NONNULLCharacteristic value signifying that the source guarantees that
 encountered elements will not be  | 
| int | ORDEREDCharacteristic value signifying that an encounter order is defined for elements. | 
| int | SIZEDCharacteristic value signifying that the value returned from
  | 
| int | SORTEDCharacteristic value signifying that encounter order follows a defined sort order. | 
| int | SUBSIZEDCharacteristic value signifying that all Spliterators resulting from
  | 
| Public methods | |
|---|---|
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        int | 
      characteristics()
      Returns a set of characteristics of this Spliterator and its elements. | 
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        long | 
      estimateSize()
      Returns an estimate of the number of elements that would be
 encountered by a  | 
| 
        
        default
        
        
        
        void | 
      forEachRemaining(Consumer<? super T> action)
      Performs the given action for each remaining element, sequentially in the current thread, until all elements have been processed or the action throws an exception. | 
| 
        
        default
        
        
        
        Comparator<? super T> | 
      getComparator()
      If this Spliterator's source is  | 
| 
        
        default
        
        
        
        long | 
      getExactSizeIfKnown()
      Convenience method that returns  | 
| 
        
        default
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      hasCharacteristics(int characteristics)
      Returns  | 
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        boolean | 
      tryAdvance(Consumer<? super T> action)
      If a remaining element exists: performs the given action on it,
 returning  | 
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        Spliterator<T> | 
      trySplit()
      If this spliterator can be partitioned, returns a Spliterator covering elements, that will, upon return from this method, not be covered by this Spliterator. | 
Constants
CONCURRENT
public static final int CONCURRENT
Characteristic value signifying that the element source may be safely concurrently modified (allowing additions, replacements, and/or removals) by multiple threads without external synchronization. If so, the Spliterator is expected to have a documented policy concerning the impact of modifications during traversal.
A top-level Spliterator should not report both CONCURRENT and
 SIZED, since the finite size, if known, may change if the source
 is concurrently modified during traversal. Such a Spliterator is
 inconsistent and no guarantees can be made about any computation using
 that Spliterator. Sub-spliterators may report SIZED if the
 sub-split size is known and additions or removals to the source are not
 reflected when traversing.
 
A top-level Spliterator should not report both CONCURRENT and
 IMMUTABLE, since they are mutually exclusive. Such a Spliterator
 is inconsistent and no guarantees can be made about any computation using
 that Spliterator. Sub-spliterators may report IMMUTABLE if
 additions or removals to the source are not reflected when traversing.
Constant Value: 4096 (0x00001000)
DISTINCT
public static final int DISTINCT
Characteristic value signifying that, for each pair of
 encountered elements x, y, !x.equals(y). This
 applies for example, to a Spliterator based on a Set.
Constant Value: 1 (0x00000001)
IMMUTABLE
public static final int IMMUTABLE
Characteristic value signifying that the element source cannot be
 structurally modified; that is, elements cannot be added, replaced, or
 removed, so such changes cannot occur during traversal. A Spliterator
 that does not report IMMUTABLE or CONCURRENT is expected
 to have a documented policy (for example throwing
 ConcurrentModificationException) concerning structural
 interference detected during traversal.
Constant Value: 1024 (0x00000400)
NONNULL
public static final int NONNULL
Characteristic value signifying that the source guarantees that
 encountered elements will not be null. (This applies,
 for example, to most concurrent collections, queues, and maps.)
Constant Value: 256 (0x00000100)
ORDERED
public static final int ORDERED
Characteristic value signifying that an encounter order is defined for
 elements. If so, this Spliterator guarantees that method
 trySplit() splits a strict prefix of elements, that method
 tryAdvance(Consumer) steps by one element in prefix order, and that
 forEachRemaining(Consumer) performs actions in encounter order.
 
A Collection has an encounter order if the corresponding
 Collection.iterator documents an order. If so, the encounter
 order is the same as the documented order. Otherwise, a collection does
 not have an encounter order.
Constant Value: 16 (0x00000010)
SIZED
public static final int SIZED
Characteristic value signifying that the value returned from
 estimateSize() prior to traversal or splitting represents a
 finite size that, in the absence of structural source modification,
 represents an exact count of the number of elements that would be
 encountered by a complete traversal.
Constant Value: 64 (0x00000040)
SORTED
public static final int SORTED
Characteristic value signifying that encounter order follows a defined
 sort order. If so, method getComparator() returns the associated
 Comparator, or null if all elements are Comparable and
 are sorted by their natural ordering.
 
A Spliterator that reports SORTED must also report
 ORDERED.
Constant Value: 4 (0x00000004)
SUBSIZED
public static final int SUBSIZED
Characteristic value signifying that all Spliterators resulting from
 trySplit() will be both SIZED and SUBSIZED.
 (This means that all child Spliterators, whether direct or indirect, will
 be SIZED.)
 
A Spliterator that does not report SIZED as required by
 SUBSIZED is inconsistent and no guarantees can be made about any
 computation using that Spliterator.
Constant Value: 16384 (0x00004000)
Public methods
characteristics
public abstract int characteristics ()
Returns a set of characteristics of this Spliterator and its
 elements. The result is represented as ORed values from ORDERED, DISTINCT, SORTED, SIZED,
 NONNULL, IMMUTABLE, CONCURRENT,
 SUBSIZED.  Repeated calls to characteristics() on
 a given spliterator, prior to or in-between calls to trySplit,
 should always return the same result.
 
If a Spliterator reports an inconsistent set of characteristics (either those returned from a single invocation or across multiple invocations), no guarantees can be made about any computation using this Spliterator.
API Note:
- The characteristics of a given spliterator before splitting
 may differ from the characteristics after splitting.  For specific
 examples see the characteristic values SIZED,SUBSIZEDandCONCURRENT.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a representation of characteristics | 
estimateSize
public abstract long estimateSize ()
Returns an estimate of the number of elements that would be
 encountered by a forEachRemaining(Consumer) traversal, or returns Long.MAX_VALUE if infinite, unknown, or too expensive to compute.
 
If this Spliterator is SIZED and has not yet been partially
 traversed or split, or this Spliterator is SUBSIZED and has
 not yet been partially traversed, this estimate must be an accurate
 count of elements that would be encountered by a complete traversal.
 Otherwise, this estimate may be arbitrarily inaccurate, but must decrease
 as specified across invocations of trySplit().
API Note:
- Even an inexact estimate is often useful and inexpensive to compute. For example, a sub-spliterator of an approximately balanced binary tree may return a value that estimates the number of elements to be half of that of its parent; if the root Spliterator does not maintain an accurate count, it could estimate size to be the power of two corresponding to its maximum depth.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long | the estimated size, or Long.MAX_VALUEif infinite,
         unknown, or too expensive to compute. | 
forEachRemaining
public void forEachRemaining (Consumer<? super T> action)
Performs the given action for each remaining element, sequentially in
 the current thread, until all elements have been processed or the action
 throws an exception.  If this Spliterator is ORDERED, actions
 are performed in encounter order.  Exceptions thrown by the action
 are relayed to the caller.
 
Subsequent behavior of a spliterator is unspecified if the action throws an exception.
Implementation Requirements:
- The default implementation repeatedly invokes tryAdvance(Consumer)until it returnsfalse. It should be overridden whenever possible.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| action | Consumer: The action | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified action is null | 
getComparator
public Comparator<? super T> getComparator ()
If this Spliterator's source is SORTED by a Comparator,
 returns that Comparator. If the source is SORTED in
 natural order, returns null.  Otherwise,
 if the source is not SORTED, throws IllegalStateException.
Implementation Requirements:
- The default implementation always throws IllegalStateException.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Comparator<? super T> | a Comparator, or nullif the elements are sorted in the
 natural order. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalStateException | if the spliterator does not report
         a characteristic of SORTED. | 
getExactSizeIfKnown
public long getExactSizeIfKnown ()
Convenience method that returns estimateSize() if this
 Spliterator is SIZED, else -1.
Implementation Requirements:
- The default implementation returns the result of estimateSize()if the Spliterator reports a characteristic ofSIZED, and-1otherwise.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long | the exact size, if known, else -1. | 
hasCharacteristics
public boolean hasCharacteristics (int characteristics)
Returns true if this Spliterator's characteristics() contain all of the given characteristics.
Implementation Requirements:
- The default implementation returns true if the corresponding bits of the given characteristics are set.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| characteristics | int: the characteristics to check for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif all the specified characteristics are present,
 elsefalse | 
tryAdvance
public abstract boolean tryAdvance (Consumer<? super T> action)
If a remaining element exists: performs the given action on it,
 returning true; else returns false.  If this
 Spliterator is ORDERED the action is performed on the
 next element in encounter order.  Exceptions thrown by the
 action are relayed to the caller.
 
Subsequent behavior of a spliterator is unspecified if the action throws an exception.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| action | Consumer: The action whose operation is performed at-most once | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | falseif no remaining elements existed
 upon entry to this method, elsetrue. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified action is null | 
trySplit
public abstract Spliterator<T> trySplit ()
If this spliterator can be partitioned, returns a Spliterator covering elements, that will, upon return from this method, not be covered by this Spliterator.
If this Spliterator is ORDERED, the returned Spliterator
 must cover a strict prefix of the elements.
 
Unless this Spliterator covers an infinite number of elements,
 repeated calls to trySplit() must eventually return null.
 Upon non-null return:
 
- the value reported for estimateSize()before splitting, must, after splitting, be greater than or equal toestimateSize()for this and the returned Spliterator; and
- if this Spliterator is SUBSIZED, thenestimateSize()for this spliterator before splitting must be equal to the sum ofestimateSize()for this and the returned Spliterator after splitting.
This method may return null for any reason,
 including emptiness, inability to split after traversal has
 commenced, data structure constraints, and efficiency
 considerations.
API Note:
- An ideal trySplitmethod efficiently (without traversal) divides its elements exactly in half, allowing balanced parallel computation. Many departures from this ideal remain highly effective; for example, only approximately splitting an approximately balanced tree, or for a tree in which leaf nodes may contain either one or two elements, failing to further split these nodes. However, large deviations in balance and/or overly inefficienttrySplitmechanics typically result in poor parallel performance.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator<T> | a Spliteratorcovering some portion of the
 elements, ornullif this spliterator cannot be split | 
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Last updated 2025-02-10 UTC.
