How to use if-else logic in Java 8 stream forEach

Solution 1:

Just put the condition into the lambda itself, e.g.

animalMap.entrySet().stream()
        .forEach(
                pair -> {
                    if (pair.getValue() != null) {
                        myMap.put(pair.getKey(), pair.getValue());
                    } else {
                        myList.add(pair.getKey());
                    }
                }
        );

Of course, this assumes that both collections (myMap and myList) are declared and initialized prior to the above piece of code.


Update: using Map.forEach makes the code shorter, plus more efficient and readable, as Jorn Vernee kindly suggested:

    animalMap.forEach(
            (key, value) -> {
                if (value != null) {
                    myMap.put(key, value);
                } else {
                    myList.add(key);
                }
            }
    );

Solution 2:

In most cases, when you find yourself using forEach on a Stream, you should rethink whether you are using the right tool for your job or whether you are using it the right way.

Generally, you should look for an appropriate terminal operation doing what you want to achieve or for an appropriate Collector. Now, there are Collectors for producing Maps and Lists, but no out of-the-box collector for combining two different collectors, based on a predicate.

Now, this answer contains a collector for combining two collectors. Using this collector, you can achieve the task as

Pair<Map<KeyType, Animal>, List<KeyType>> pair = animalMap.entrySet().stream()
    .collect(conditional(entry -> entry.getValue() != null,
            Collectors.toMap(Map.Entry::getKey, Map.Entry::getValue),
            Collectors.mapping(Map.Entry::getKey, Collectors.toList()) ));
Map<KeyType,Animal> myMap = pair.a;
List<KeyType> myList = pair.b;

But maybe, you can solve this specific task in a simpler way. One of you results matches the input type; it’s the same map just stripped off the entries which map to null. If your original map is mutable and you don’t need it afterwards, you can just collect the list and remove these keys from the original map as they are mutually exclusive:

List<KeyType> myList=animalMap.entrySet().stream()
    .filter(pair -> pair.getValue() == null)
    .map(Map.Entry::getKey)
    .collect(Collectors.toList());

animalMap.keySet().removeAll(myList);

Note that you can remove mappings to null even without having the list of the other keys:

animalMap.values().removeIf(Objects::isNull);

or

animalMap.values().removeAll(Collections.singleton(null));

If you can’t (or don’t want to) modify the original map, there is still a solution without a custom collector. As hinted in Alexis C.’s answer, partitioningBy is going into the right direction, but you may simplify it:

Map<Boolean,Map<KeyType,Animal>> tmp = animalMap.entrySet().stream()
    .collect(Collectors.partitioningBy(pair -> pair.getValue() != null,
                 Collectors.toMap(Map.Entry::getKey, Map.Entry::getValue)));
Map<KeyType,Animal> myMap = tmp.get(true);
List<KeyType> myList = new ArrayList<>(tmp.get(false).keySet());

The bottom line is, don’t forget about ordinary Collection operations, you don’t have to do everything with the new Stream API.

Solution 3:

The problem by using stream().forEach(..) with a call to add or put inside the forEach (so you mutate the external myMap or myList instance) is that you can run easily into concurrency issues if someone turns the stream in parallel and the collection you are modifying is not thread safe.

One approach you can take is to first partition the entries in the original map. Once you have that, grab the corresponding list of entries and collect them in the appropriate map and list.

Map<Boolean, List<Map.Entry<K, V>>> partitions =
    animalMap.entrySet()
             .stream()
             .collect(partitioningBy(e -> e.getValue() == null));

Map<K, V> myMap = 
    partitions.get(false)
              .stream()
              .collect(toMap(Map.Entry::getKey, Map.Entry::getValue));

List<K> myList =
    partitions.get(true)
              .stream()
              .map(Map.Entry::getKey) 
              .collect(toList());

... or if you want to do it in one pass, implement a custom collector (assuming a Tuple2<E1, E2> class exists, you can create your own), e.g:

public static <K,V> Collector<Map.Entry<K, V>, ?, Tuple2<Map<K, V>, List<K>>> customCollector() {
    return Collector.of(
            () -> new Tuple2<>(new HashMap<>(), new ArrayList<>()),
            (pair, entry) -> {
                if(entry.getValue() == null) {
                    pair._2.add(entry.getKey());
                } else {
                    pair._1.put(entry.getKey(), entry.getValue());
                }
            },
            (p1, p2) -> {
                p1._1.putAll(p2._1);
                p1._2.addAll(p2._2);
                return p1;
            });
}

with its usage:

Tuple2<Map<K, V>, List<K>> pair = 
    animalMap.entrySet().parallelStream().collect(customCollector());

You can tune it more if you want, for example by providing a predicate as parameter.

Solution 4:

I think it's possible in Java 9:

animalMap.entrySet().stream()
                .forEach(
                        pair -> Optional.ofNullable(pair.getValue())
                                .ifPresentOrElse(v -> myMap.put(pair.getKey(), v), v -> myList.add(pair.getKey())))
                );

Need the ifPresentOrElse for it to work though. (I think a for loop looks better.)