Java collections convert a string to a list of characters
In Java8 you can use streams I suppose. List of Character objects:
List<Character> chars = str.chars()
.mapToObj(e->(char)e).collect(Collectors.toList());
And set could be obtained in a similar way:
Set<Character> charsSet = str.chars()
.mapToObj(e->(char)e).collect(Collectors.toSet());
You will have to either use a loop, or create a collection wrapper like Arrays.asList
which works on primitive char arrays (or directly on strings).
List<Character> list = new ArrayList<Character>();
Set<Character> unique = new HashSet<Character>();
for(char c : "abc".toCharArray()) {
list.add(c);
unique.add(c);
}
Here is an Arrays.asList
like wrapper for strings:
public List<Character> asList(final String string) {
return new AbstractList<Character>() {
public int size() { return string.length(); }
public Character get(int index) { return string.charAt(index); }
};
}
This one is an immutable list, though. If you want a mutable list, use this with a char[]
:
public List<Character> asList(final char[] string) {
return new AbstractList<Character>() {
public int size() { return string.length; }
public Character get(int index) { return string[index]; }
public Character set(int index, Character newVal) {
char old = string[index];
string[index] = newVal;
return old;
}
};
}
Analogous to this you can implement this for the other primitive types. Note that using this normally is not recommended, since for every access you would do a boxing and unboxing operation.
The Guava library contains similar List wrapper methods for several primitive array classes, like Chars.asList, and a wrapper for String in Lists.charactersOf(String).
The lack of a good way to convert between a primitive array and a collection of its corresponding wrapper type is solved by some third party libraries. Guava, a very common one, has a convenience method to do the conversion:
List<Character> characterList = Chars.asList("abc".toCharArray());
Set<Character> characterSet = new HashSet<Character>(characterList);
Use a Java 8 Stream
.
myString.chars().mapToObj(i -> (char) i).collect(Collectors.toList());
Breakdown:
myString
.chars() // Convert to an IntStream
.mapToObj(i -> (char) i) // Convert int to char, which gets boxed to Character
.collect(Collectors.toList()); // Collect in a List<Character>
(I have absolutely no idea why String#chars()
returns an IntStream
.)