Java Compare Two Lists
Solution 1:
EDIT
Here are two versions. One using ArrayList
and other using HashSet
Compare them and create your own version from this, until you get what you need.
This should be enough to cover the:
P.S: It is not a school assignment :) So if you just guide me it will be enough
part of your question.
continuing with the original answer:
You may use a java.util.Collection
and/or java.util.ArrayList
for that.
The retainAll method does the following:
Retains only the elements in this collection that are contained in the specified collection
see this sample:
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
public class Repeated {
public static void main( String [] args ) {
Collection listOne = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList("milan","dingo", "elpha", "hafil", "meat", "iga", "neeta.peeta"));
Collection listTwo = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList("hafil", "iga", "binga", "mike", "dingo"));
listOne.retainAll( listTwo );
System.out.println( listOne );
}
}
EDIT
For the second part ( similar values ) you may use the removeAll method:
Removes all of this collection's elements that are also contained in the specified collection.
This second version gives you also the similar values and handles repeated ( by discarding them).
This time the Collection
could be a Set
instead of a List
( the difference is, the Set doesn't allow repeated values )
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.Arrays;
class Repeated {
public static void main( String [] args ) {
Collection<String> listOne = Arrays.asList("milan","iga",
"dingo","iga",
"elpha","iga",
"hafil","iga",
"meat","iga",
"neeta.peeta","iga");
Collection<String> listTwo = Arrays.asList("hafil",
"iga",
"binga",
"mike",
"dingo","dingo","dingo");
Collection<String> similar = new HashSet<String>( listOne );
Collection<String> different = new HashSet<String>();
different.addAll( listOne );
different.addAll( listTwo );
similar.retainAll( listTwo );
different.removeAll( similar );
System.out.printf("One:%s%nTwo:%s%nSimilar:%s%nDifferent:%s%n", listOne, listTwo, similar, different);
}
}
Output:
$ java Repeated
One:[milan, iga, dingo, iga, elpha, iga, hafil, iga, meat, iga, neeta.peeta, iga]
Two:[hafil, iga, binga, mike, dingo, dingo, dingo]
Similar:[dingo, iga, hafil]
Different:[mike, binga, milan, meat, elpha, neeta.peeta]
If it doesn't do exactly what you need, it gives you a good start so you can handle from here.
Question for the reader: How would you include all the repeated values?
Solution 2:
You can try intersection()
and subtract()
methods from CollectionUtils
.
intersection()
method gives you a collection containing common elements and the subtract()
method gives you all the uncommon ones.
They should also take care of similar elements
Solution 3:
Are these really lists (ordered, with duplicates), or are they sets (unordered, no duplicates)?
Because if it's the latter, then you can use, say, a java.util.HashSet<E>
and do this in expected linear time using the convenient retainAll
.
List<String> list1 = Arrays.asList(
"milan", "milan", "iga", "dingo", "milan"
);
List<String> list2 = Arrays.asList(
"hafil", "milan", "dingo", "meat"
);
// intersection as set
Set<String> intersect = new HashSet<String>(list1);
intersect.retainAll(list2);
System.out.println(intersect.size()); // prints "2"
System.out.println(intersect); // prints "[milan, dingo]"
// intersection/union as list
List<String> intersectList = new ArrayList<String>();
intersectList.addAll(list1);
intersectList.addAll(list2);
intersectList.retainAll(intersect);
System.out.println(intersectList);
// prints "[milan, milan, dingo, milan, milan, dingo]"
// original lists are structurally unmodified
System.out.println(list1); // prints "[milan, milan, iga, dingo, milan]"
System.out.println(list2); // prints "[hafil, milan, dingo, meat]"
Solution 4:
If you are looking for a handy way to test the equality of two collections, you can use org.apache.commons.collections.CollectionUtils.isEqualCollection
, which compares two collections regardless of the ordering.
Solution 5:
Using java 8 removeIf
public int getSimilarItems(){
List<String> one = Arrays.asList("milan", "dingo", "elpha", "hafil", "meat", "iga", "neeta.peeta");
List<String> two = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList("hafil", "iga", "binga", "mike", "dingo")); //Cannot remove directly from array backed collection
int initial = two.size();
two.removeIf(one::contains);
return initial - two.size();
}