@GwtCompatible public abstract class Ordering<T> extends Object implements Comparator<T>
A comparator, with additional methods to support common operations. This is an “enriched” version of Comparator
, in the same sense that FluentIterable
is an enriched Iterable
.
Like other fluent types, there are three types of methods present: methods for acquiring, chaining, and using.
The common ways to get an instance of Ordering
are:
compare(T, T)
instead of implementing Comparator
directly
Comparator
instance to from(Comparator)
natural()
Then you can use the chaining methods to get an altered version of that Ordering
, including:
Finally, use the resulting Ordering
anywhere a Comparator
is required, or use
any of its special operations, such as:
immutableSortedCopy(java.lang.Iterable<E>)
isOrdered(java.lang.Iterable<? extends T>)
/ isStrictlyOrdered(java.lang.Iterable<? extends T>)
min(java.util.Iterator<E>)
/ max(java.util.Iterator<E>)
Complex chained orderings like the following example can be challenging to understand.
Ordering<Foo> ordering =
Ordering.natural()
.nullsFirst()
.onResultOf(getBarFunction)
.nullsLast();
Note that each chaining method returns a new ordering instance which is backed by the previous instance, but has the chance to act on values before handing off to that backing instance. As a result, it usually helps to read chained ordering expressions backwards. For example, when compare
is called on the above ordering:
Foo
is null, that null value is treated as greater
Foo
values are passed to getBarFunction
(we will be
comparing Bar
values from now on)
Bar
is null, that null value is treated as lesser
Bar.compareTo(Bar)
is
returned)
Alas, reverse()
is a little different. As you read backwards through a chain and encounter a call to reverse
, continue working backwards until a result is determined, and then reverse that result.
Except as noted, the orderings returned by the factory methods of this class are serializable if and only if the provided instances that back them are. For example, if ordering
and function
can themselves be serialized, then ordering.onResultOf(function)
can as well.
See the Guava User Guide article on Ordering
.
Modifier | Constructor and Description |
---|---|
protected |
Ordering()
Constructs a new instance of this class (only invokable by the subclass constructor, typically implicit).
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static Ordering<Object> |
allEqual()
Returns an ordering which treats all values as equal, indicating “no ordering.” Passing this ordering to any stable sort algorithm results in no change to the order of elements.
|
static Ordering<Object> |
arbitrary()
Returns an arbitrary ordering over all objects, for which
compare(a,
b) == 0 implies a == b (identity equality). |
int |
binarySearch(List<? extends T> sortedList,
T key)
|
abstract int |
compare(T left,
T right) |
<U extends T> |
compound(Comparator<? super U> secondaryComparator)
Returns an ordering which first uses the ordering
this , but which in the event of a “tie”, then delegates to secondaryComparator . |
static <T> Ordering<T> |
compound(Iterable<? extends Comparator<? super T>> comparators)
Returns an ordering which tries each given comparator in order until a non-zero result is found, returning that result, and returning zero only if all comparators return zero.
|
static <T> Ordering<T> |
explicit(List<T> valuesInOrder)
Returns an ordering that compares objects according to the order in which they appear in the given list.
|
static <T> Ordering<T> |
explicit(T leastValue,
T... remainingValuesInOrder)
Returns an ordering that compares objects according to the order in which they are given to this method.
|
static <T> Ordering<T> |
from(Comparator<T> comparator)
Returns an ordering based on an existing comparator instance.
|
static <T> Ordering<T> |
from(Ordering<T> ordering)
Deprecated.
no need to use this
|
<E extends T> |
greatestOf(Iterable<E> iterable,
int k)
Returns the
k greatest elements of the given iterable according to this ordering, in order from greatest to least. |
<E extends T> |
greatestOf(Iterator<E> iterator,
int k)
Returns the
k greatest elements from the given iterator according to this ordering, in order from greatest to least. |
<E extends T> |
immutableSortedCopy(Iterable<E> elements)
Returns an immutable list containing
elements sorted by this ordering. |
boolean |
isOrdered(Iterable<? extends T> iterable)
Returns
true if each element in iterable after the first is greater than or equal to the element that preceded it, according to this ordering. |
boolean |
isStrictlyOrdered(Iterable<? extends T> iterable)
Returns
true if each element in iterable after the first is strictly greater than the element that preceded it, according to this ordering. |
<E extends T> |
leastOf(Iterable<E> iterable,
int k)
Returns the
k least elements of the given iterable according to this ordering, in order from least to greatest. |
<E extends T> |
leastOf(Iterator<E> elements,
int k)
Returns the
k least elements from the given iterator according to this ordering, in order from least to greatest. |
<S extends T> |
lexicographical()
Returns a new ordering which sorts iterables by comparing corresponding elements pairwise until a nonzero result is found; imposes “dictionary order”.
|
<E extends T> |
max(E a,
E b)
Returns the greater of the two values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
max(E a,
E b,
E c,
E... rest)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
max(Iterable<E> iterable)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
max(Iterator<E> iterator)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
min(E a,
E b)
Returns the lesser of the two values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
min(E a,
E b,
E c,
E... rest)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
min(Iterable<E> iterable)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
<E extends T> |
min(Iterator<E> iterator)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering.
|
static <C extends Comparable> |
natural()
Returns a serializable ordering that uses the natural order of the values.
|
<S extends T> |
nullsFirst()
Returns an ordering that treats
null as less than all other values and uses this to compare non-null values. |
<S extends T> |
nullsLast()
Returns an ordering that treats
null as greater than all other values and uses this ordering to compare non-null values. |
<F> Ordering<F> |
onResultOf(Function<F,? extends T> function)
Returns a new ordering on
F which orders elements by first applying a function to them, then comparing those results using this . |
<S extends T> |
reverse()
Returns the reverse of this ordering; the
Ordering equivalent to Collections.reverseOrder(Comparator) . |
<E extends T> |
sortedCopy(Iterable<E> elements)
Returns a mutable list containing
elements sorted by this ordering; use this only when the resulting list may need further modification, or may contain null . |
static Ordering<Object> |
usingToString()
Returns an ordering that compares objects by the natural ordering of their string representations as returned by
toString() . |
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
comparing, comparing, comparingDouble, comparingInt, comparingLong, equals, naturalOrder, nullsFirst, nullsLast, reversed, reverseOrder, thenComparing, thenComparing, thenComparing, thenComparingDouble, thenComparingInt, thenComparingLong
protected Ordering()
Constructs a new instance of this class (only invokable by the subclass constructor, typically implicit).
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <C extends Comparable> Ordering<C> natural()
Returns a serializable ordering that uses the natural order of the values. The ordering throws a NullPointerException
when passed a null parameter.
The type specification is <C extends Comparable>
, instead of the technically correct <C extends Comparable<? super C>>
, to support legacy types from before Java 5.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <T> Ordering<T> from(Comparator<T> comparator)
Returns an ordering based on an existing comparator instance. Note that it is unnecessary to create a new anonymous inner class implementing Comparator
just to pass it in here. Instead, simply subclass Ordering
and implement its compare
method directly.
comparator
- the comparator that defines the orderOrdering
; otherwise an ordering that wraps that comparator@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) @Deprecated public static <T> Ordering<T> from(Ordering<T> ordering)
Simply returns its argument.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <T> Ordering<T> explicit(List<T> valuesInOrder)
Returns an ordering that compares objects according to the order in which they appear in the given list. Only objects present in the list (according to Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
) may be compared. This comparator imposes a “partial ordering” over the type T
. Subsequent changes to the valuesInOrder
list will have no effect on the returned comparator. Null values in the list are not supported.
The returned comparator throws an ClassCastException
when it receives an input parameter that isn’t among the provided values.
The generated comparator is serializable if all the provided values are serializable.
valuesInOrder
- the values that the returned comparator will be able to compare, in the order the comparator should induceNullPointerException
- if any of the provided values is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if valuesInOrder
contains any duplicate values (according to Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
)@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <T> Ordering<T> explicit(T leastValue, T... remainingValuesInOrder)
Returns an ordering that compares objects according to the order in which they are given to this method. Only objects present in the argument list (according to Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
) may be compared. This comparator imposes a “partial ordering” over the type T
. Null values in the argument list are not supported.
The returned comparator throws a ClassCastException
when it receives an input parameter that isn’t among the provided values.
The generated comparator is serializable if all the provided values are serializable.
leastValue
- the value which the returned comparator should consider the “least” of all valuesremainingValuesInOrder
- the rest of the values that the returned comparator will be able to compare, in the order the comparator should followNullPointerException
- if any of the provided values is nullIllegalArgumentException
- if any duplicate values (according to Object.equals(Object)
) are present among the method arguments@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static Ordering<Object> allEqual()
Returns an ordering which treats all values as equal, indicating “no ordering.” Passing this ordering to any stable sort algorithm results in no change to the order of elements. Note especially that sortedCopy(java.lang.Iterable<E>)
and immutableSortedCopy(java.lang.Iterable<E>)
are stable, and in the returned instance these are implemented by simply copying the source list.
Example:
Ordering.allEqual().nullsLast().sortedCopy(
asList(t, null, e, s, null, t, null))
Assuming t
, e
and s
are non-null, this returns [t, e, s, t, null, null, null]
regardlesss of the true comparison order of those three values (which might not even implement Comparable
at all).
Warning: by definition, this comparator is not consistent with equals (as defined here). Avoid its use in APIs, such as TreeSet.TreeSet(Comparator)
, where such consistency is expected.
The returned comparator is serializable.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static Ordering<Object> usingToString()
Returns an ordering that compares objects by the natural ordering of their string representations as returned by toString()
. It does not support null values.
The comparator is serializable.
public static Ordering<Object> arbitrary()
Returns an arbitrary ordering over all objects, for which compare(a,
b) == 0
implies a == b
(identity equality). There is no meaning whatsoever to the order imposed, but it is constant for the life of the VM.
Because the ordering is identity-based, it is not “consistent with Object.equals(Object)
” as defined by Comparator
. Use caution when building a SortedSet
or SortedMap
from it, as the resulting collection will not behave exactly according to spec.
This ordering is not serializable, as its implementation relies on System.identityHashCode(Object)
, so its behavior cannot be preserved across serialization.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <S extends T> Ordering<S> reverse()
Returns the reverse of this ordering; the Ordering
equivalent to Collections.reverseOrder(Comparator)
.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <S extends T> Ordering<S> nullsFirst()
Returns an ordering that treats null
as less than all other values and uses this
to compare non-null values.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <S extends T> Ordering<S> nullsLast()
Returns an ordering that treats null
as greater than all other values and uses this ordering to compare non-null values.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <F> Ordering<F> onResultOf(Function<F,? extends T> function)
Returns a new ordering on F
which orders elements by first applying a function to them, then comparing those results using this
. For example, to compare objects by their string forms, in a case-insensitive manner, use:
Ordering.from(String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER)
.onResultOf(Functions.toStringFunction())
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <U extends T> Ordering<U> compound(Comparator<? super U> secondaryComparator)
Returns an ordering which first uses the ordering this
, but which in the event of a “tie”, then delegates to secondaryComparator
. For example, to sort a bug list first by status and second by priority, you might use byStatus.compound(byPriority)
. For a compound ordering with three or more components, simply chain multiple calls to this method.
An ordering produced by this method, or a chain of calls to this method, is equivalent to one created using compound(Iterable)
on the same component comparators.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <T> Ordering<T> compound(Iterable<? extends Comparator<? super T>> comparators)
Returns an ordering which tries each given comparator in order until a non-zero result is found, returning that result, and returning zero only if all comparators return zero. The returned ordering is based on the state of the comparators
iterable at the time it was provided to this method.
The returned ordering is equivalent to that produced using Ordering.from(comp1).compound(comp2).compound(comp3) . . .
.
Warning: Supplying an argument with undefined iteration order, such as a HashSet
, will produce non-deterministic results.
comparators
- the comparators to try in order@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public <S extends T> Ordering<Iterable<S>> lexicographical()
Returns a new ordering which sorts iterables by comparing corresponding elements pairwise until a nonzero result is found; imposes “dictionary order”. If the end of one iterable is reached, but not the other, the shorter iterable is considered to be less than the longer one. For example, a lexicographical natural ordering over integers considers [] < [1] < [1, 1] < [1, 2] < [2]
.
Note that ordering.lexicographical().reverse()
is not equivalent to ordering.reverse().lexicographical()
(consider how each would order [1]
and [1, 1]
).
public abstract int compare(@Nullable T left, @Nullable T right)
compare
in interface Comparator<T>
public <E extends T> E min(Iterator<E> iterator)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple least values, the first of those is returned. The iterator will be left exhausted: its hasNext()
method will return false
.
iterator
- the iterator whose minimum element is to be determinedNoSuchElementException
- if iterator
is emptyClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E min(Iterable<E> iterable)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple least values, the first of those is returned.
iterable
- the iterable whose minimum element is to be determinedNoSuchElementException
- if iterable
is emptyClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E min(@Nullable E a, @Nullable E b)
Returns the lesser of the two values according to this ordering. If the values compare as 0, the first is returned.
Implementation note: this method is invoked by the default implementations of the other min
overloads, so overriding it will affect their behavior.
a
- value to compare, returned if less than or equal to b.b
- value to compare.ClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E min(@Nullable E a, @Nullable E b, @Nullable E c, E... rest)
Returns the least of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple least values, the first of those is returned.
a
- value to compare, returned if less than or equal to the rest.b
- value to comparec
- value to comparerest
- values to compareClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E max(Iterator<E> iterator)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple greatest values, the first of those is returned. The iterator will be left exhausted: its hasNext()
method will return false
.
iterator
- the iterator whose maximum element is to be determinedNoSuchElementException
- if iterator
is emptyClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E max(Iterable<E> iterable)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple greatest values, the first of those is returned.
iterable
- the iterable whose maximum element is to be determinedNoSuchElementException
- if iterable
is emptyClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E max(@Nullable E a, @Nullable E b)
Returns the greater of the two values according to this ordering. If the values compare as 0, the first is returned.
Implementation note: this method is invoked by the default implementations of the other max
overloads, so overriding it will affect their behavior.
a
- value to compare, returned if greater than or equal to b.b
- value to compare.ClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> E max(@Nullable E a, @Nullable E b, @Nullable E c, E... rest)
Returns the greatest of the specified values according to this ordering. If there are multiple greatest values, the first of those is returned.
a
- value to compare, returned if greater than or equal to the rest.b
- value to comparec
- value to comparerest
- values to compareClassCastException
- if the parameters are not mutually comparable under this ordering.public <E extends T> List<E> leastOf(Iterable<E> iterable, int k)
Returns the k
least elements of the given iterable according to this ordering, in order from least to greatest. If there are fewer than k
elements present, all will be included.
The implementation does not necessarily use a stable sorting algorithm; when multiple elements are equivalent, it is undefined which will come first.
RandomAccess
list of the k
least elements in ascending orderIllegalArgumentException
- if k
is negativepublic <E extends T> List<E> leastOf(Iterator<E> elements, int k)
Returns the k
least elements from the given iterator according to this ordering, in order from least to greatest. If there are fewer than k
elements present, all will be included.
The implementation does not necessarily use a stable sorting algorithm; when multiple elements are equivalent, it is undefined which will come first.
RandomAccess
list of the k
least elements in ascending orderIllegalArgumentException
- if k
is negativepublic <E extends T> List<E> greatestOf(Iterable<E> iterable, int k)
Returns the k
greatest elements of the given iterable according to this ordering, in order from greatest to least. If there are fewer than k
elements present, all will be included.
The implementation does not necessarily use a stable sorting algorithm; when multiple elements are equivalent, it is undefined which will come first.
RandomAccess
list of the k
greatest elements in descending orderIllegalArgumentException
- if k
is negativepublic <E extends T> List<E> greatestOf(Iterator<E> iterator, int k)
Returns the k
greatest elements from the given iterator according to this ordering, in order from greatest to least. If there are fewer than k
elements present, all will be included.
The implementation does not necessarily use a stable sorting algorithm; when multiple elements are equivalent, it is undefined which will come first.
RandomAccess
list of the k
greatest elements in descending orderIllegalArgumentException
- if k
is negativepublic <E extends T> List<E> sortedCopy(Iterable<E> elements)
Returns a mutable list containing elements
sorted by this ordering; use this only when the resulting list may need further modification, or may contain null
. The input is not modified. The returned list is serializable and has random access.
Unlike Sets.newTreeSet(Iterable)
, this method does not discard elements that are duplicates according to the comparator. The sort performed is stable, meaning that such elements will appear in the returned list in the same order they appeared in elements
.
Performance note: According to our benchmarking on Open JDK 7, immutableSortedCopy(java.lang.Iterable<E>)
generally performs better (in both time and space) than this method, and this method in turn generally performs better than copying the list and calling Collections.sort(List)
.
public <E extends T> ImmutableList<E> immutableSortedCopy(Iterable<E> elements)
Returns an immutable list containing elements
sorted by this ordering. The input is not modified.
Unlike Sets.newTreeSet(Iterable)
, this method does not discard elements that are duplicates according to the comparator. The sort performed is stable, meaning that such elements will appear in the returned list in the same order they appeared in elements
.
Performance note: According to our benchmarking on Open JDK 7, this method is the most efficient way to make a sorted copy of a collection.
NullPointerException
- if any of elements
(or elements
itself) is nullpublic boolean isOrdered(Iterable<? extends T> iterable)
Returns true
if each element in iterable
after the first is greater than or equal to the element that preceded it, according to this ordering. Note that this is always true when the iterable has fewer than two elements.
public boolean isStrictlyOrdered(Iterable<? extends T> iterable)
Returns true
if each element in iterable
after the first is strictly greater than the element that preceded it, according to this ordering. Note that this is always true when the iterable has fewer than two elements.