slowly growing explanation over all common java data structures

This commit is contained in:
Xevion
2020-01-27 14:46:10 -06:00
parent f1529d4a14
commit 5f9cbbfb4f

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@@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ import java.util.Arrays;
{
private int x;
private int y;
Point(int x, int y) <--- Initalization
Point(int x, int y) <--- Initialization
{ <--- is
this.x = x; <--- occurring
this.y = y; <--- right
@@ -350,10 +350,94 @@ It also expects a `new`, not just `String[]` before the *literal* part of a lite
### Bitwise Meanings
### What is Stack, Queue, LinkedList, ArrayList,
### Common Java Data Structures Summary
### How to Sort different types of Arrays
Java contains many object based data structures that you can import, some used more than others (ArrayList, for example).
Not all of them work in familiar ways, and their methods can be confusing without proper usage, study, and a quick explanation over how they're used.
#### Interfaces
##### Collection
Common Implementing SubInterfaces:
* Deque
* List
* Queue
* Set
* SortedSet
Common Implementing Classes:
* ArrayList
* ArrayDeque
* EnumSet
* HashSet
* LinkedList
* PriorityQueue
* Stack
* TreeSet
##### Iterable
Common Implementing SubInterfaces
* Collection
* Deque
* List
* Queue
* Set
* SortedSet
Common Implementing Classes:
* ArrayDeque
* ArrayList
* EnumSet
* HashSet
* LinkedList
* PriorityQueue
* Stack
* TreeSet
##### List
Super Interfaces:
* Collection
* Iterable
Implementing Classes:
* ArrayList
* LinkedList
* Stack
A unordered collection (also known as a *sequence*) that allows precise control over where each element is inserted in a list.
Users have methods allowing all of the following to methods:
* 4 methods providing positional index-based access to list elements.
* 1 method for accessing a special iterator, `ListIterator` allowing element insertion and replacement starting from a specified position.
* 2 methods for searching for a specified object. Usually *costly* linear searches.
* 2 methods for efficiently inserting and removing *multiple* elements at an arbitrary point.
##### Set
##### Queue
##### Deque
##### SortedSet
##### Map
##### SortedMap
##### NavigableMap
#### Classes
##### ArrayList
##### LinkedList
##### Stack
##### PriorityQueue
##### TreeSet
##### ArrayDeque
##### EnumSet
##### HashSet
##### HashMap
### How to Sort Different Types of Arrays
For arrays, they can be sorted using `Arrays.sort` from `java.util.Arrays`.
For lists, one can use `Collections.sort` to sort any class that implements the `List` interface.
#### Primitives
#### ArrayList/