ChatGPT解决这个技术问题 Extra ChatGPT

Converting array to list in Java

How do I convert an array to a list in Java?

I used the Arrays.asList() but the behavior (and signature) somehow changed from Java SE 1.4.2 (docs now in archive) to 8 and most snippets I found on the web use the 1.4.2 behaviour.

For example:

int[] numbers = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };
Arrays.asList(numbers)

on 1.4.2 returns a list containing the elements 1, 2, 3

on 1.5.0+ returns a list containing the array 'numbers'

In many cases it should be easy to detect, but sometimes it can slip unnoticed:

Assert.assertTrue(Arrays.asList(numbers).indexOf(4) == -1);
I think your example is broken: Arrays.asList(new int[] { 1, 2, 3 }); definitely didn't compile in Java 1.4.2, because an int[] is not a Object[].
Oh, you may be right. I didn't have Java 1.4.2 compiler around to test my example before posting. Now, after your comment and Joe's answer, everything makes much more sense.
I thought Autoboxing would have covered conversion from primitive to wrapper Integer class. You can make the cast yourself first and then the above code for Arrays.asList should work.
Java 8's Stream.boxed() will take care of the autoboxing and can be used for this. See my answer below.

M
Michael

In your example, it is because you can't have a List of a primitive type. In other words, List<int> is not possible.

You can, however, have a List<Integer> using the Integer class that wraps the int primitive. Convert your array to a List with the Arrays.asList utility method.

Integer[] numbers = new Integer[] { 1, 2, 3 };
List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(numbers);

See this code run live at IdeOne.com.


Or even simpler: Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3);
How does it know not to create a List<Integer[]>?
@ThomasAhle It does not create a List it creates a List object. And if you want to be type safe you write: Arrays.asList(spam);
@ThomasAhle you could pass in Arrays.asList 0 or more elements, in comma separated format or array format whichever you desire. And the result will always be the same - a list of the elements you specified. And this is because of the method signature : public static <T> List<T> asList(T... a). Here you can read more about varargs docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/…
@ThomasAhle That is a good question. A guess it's just a rule in the java compiler. For exemple the following code returns a List<Integer[]> Integer[] integerArray1 = { 1 }; Integer[] integerArray2 = { 2 }; List<Integer[]> integerArrays = Arrays.asList(integerArray1, integerArray2);
M
Michael

In Java 8, you can use streams:

int[] numbers = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };
Arrays.stream(numbers)
      .boxed()
      .collect(Collectors.toList());

This is nice, but it won't work for boolean[]. I guess that's because it's just as easy to make a Boolean[]. That's probably a better solution. Anyway, it's an interesting quirk.
simplified in Java 16 as Arrays.stream(spam).boxed().toList();
T
TylerH

We cannot have List<int> as int is a primitive type so we can only have List<Integer>.

Java 16

Java 16 introduces a new method on Stream API called toList(). This handy method returns an unmodifiable List containing the stream elements. So, trying to add a new element to the list will simply lead to UnsupportedOperationException.

int[] ints = new int[] {1,2,3,4,5};
Arrays.stream(ints).boxed().toList();

Java 8 (int array)

int[] ints = new int[] {1,2,3,4,5};
List<Integer> list11 =Arrays.stream(ints).boxed().collect(Collectors.toList()); 

Java 8 and below (Integer array)

Integer[] integers = new Integer[] {1,2,3,4,5};
List<Integer> list21 =  Arrays.asList(integers); // returns a fixed-size list backed by the specified array.
List<Integer> list22 = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(integers)); // good
List<Integer> list23 = Arrays.stream(integers).collect(Collectors.toList()); //Java 8 only

Need ArrayList and not List?

In case we want a specific implementation of List e.g. ArrayList then we can use toCollection as:

ArrayList<Integer> list24 = Arrays.stream(integers)
                          .collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));

Why list21 cannot be structurally modified?

When we use Arrays.asList the size of the returned list is fixed because the list returned is not java.util.ArrayList, but a private static class defined inside java.util.Arrays. So if we add or remove elements from the returned list, an UnsupportedOperationException will be thrown. So we should go with list22 when we want to modify the list. If we have Java8 then we can also go with list23.

To be clear list21 can be modified in sense that we can call list21.set(index,element) but this list may not be structurally modified i.e. cannot add or remove elements from the list. You can also check this answer of mine for more explanation.

If we want an immutable list then we can wrap it as:

List<Integer> list22 = Collections.unmodifiableList(Arrays.asList(integers));

Another point to note is that the method Collections.unmodifiableList returns an unmodifiable view of the specified list. An unmodifiable view collection is a collection that is unmodifiable and is also a view onto a backing collection. Note that changes to the backing collection might still be possible, and if they occur, they are visible through the unmodifiable view.

We can have a truly immutable list in Java 9 and 10.

Truly Immutable list

Java 9:

String[] objects = {"Apple", "Ball", "Cat"};
List<String> objectList = List.of(objects);

Java 10 (Truly Immutable list):

We can use List.of introduced in Java 9. Also other ways:

List.copyOf(Arrays.asList(integers)) Arrays.stream(integers).collect(Collectors.toUnmodifiableList());


@BasilBourque I meant cannot modify the list's structure by addition/deletion but can change the elements.
Indeed, I tried some code and confirmed that calling List::add & List::remove fails with a list returned by Arrays.asList. The JavaDoc for that method is poorly written and unclear on this point. On my third reading, I suppose the phrase “fixed-size” there was meant to say one cannot add or remove elements.
R
Roman Nikitchenko

Speaking about conversion way, it depends on why do you need your List. If you need it just to read data. OK, here you go:

Integer[] values = { 1, 3, 7 };
List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(values);

But then if you do something like this:

list.add(1);

you get java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException. So for some cases you even need this:

Integer[] values = { 1, 3, 7 };
List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<Integer>(Arrays.asList(values));

First approach actually does not convert array but 'represents' it like a List. But array is under the hood with all its properties like fixed number of elements. Please note you need to specify type when constructing ArrayList.


"immutability" confused me for a moment. You can obviously change the array's values. You cannot change its size, however.
M
Michael

The problem is that varargs got introduced in Java 5 and unfortunately, Arrays.asList() got overloaded with a vararg version too. So Arrays.asList(numbers) is understood by the Java 5 compiler as a vararg parameter of int arrays.

This problem is explained in more details in Effective Java 2nd Ed., Chapter 7, Item 42.


I understand what happened, but not why it is not documented. I am looking for an alternative solution without reimplementing the wheel.
C
Community

I recently had to convert an array to a List. Later on the program filtered the list attempting to remove the data. When you use the Arrays.asList(array) function, you create a fixed size collection: you can neither add nor delete. This entry explains the problem better than I can: Why do I get an UnsupportedOperationException when trying to remove an element from a List?.

In the end, I had to do a "manual" conversion:

    List<ListItem> items = new ArrayList<ListItem>();
    for (ListItem item: itemsArray) {
        items.add(item);
    }

I suppose I could have added conversion from an array to a list using an List.addAll(items) operation.


new ArrayList<ListItem>(Arrays.asList(itemsArray)) would to the same
@BradyZhu: Granted the answer above does not solve my problem with the fixed size array, but you are basically saying RTFM here, which is always bad form. Please expound on what is wrong with the answer or don't bother to comment.
Inspection tools may show a warning here, and you've named the reason. There is no need to copy the elements manually, use Collections.addAll(items, itemsArray) instead.
Just hit this exception. I am afraid Marco13's answer should be the correct answer. I may need to go though whole year code to fix all "asList" exception.
V
Vitaliy Sokolov

Even shorter:

List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4);

M
Mincong Huang

Using Arrays

This is the simplest way to convert an array to List. However, if you try to add a new element or remove an existing element from the list, an UnsupportedOperationException will be thrown.

Integer[] existingArray = {1, 2, 3};
List<Integer> list1 = Arrays.asList(existingArray);
List<Integer> list2 = Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3);

// WARNING:
list2.add(1);     // Unsupported operation!
list2.remove(1);  // Unsupported operation!

Using ArrayList or Other List Implementations

You can use a for loop to add all the elements of the array into a List implementation, e.g. ArrayList:

List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<>();
for (int i : new int[]{1, 2, 3}) {
  list.add(i);
}

Using Stream API in Java 8

You can turn the array into a stream, then collect the stream using different collectors: The default collector in Java 8 use ArrayList behind the screen, but you can also impose your preferred implementation.

List<Integer> list1, list2, list3;
list1 = Stream.of(1, 2, 3).collect(Collectors.toList());
list2 = Stream.of(1, 2, 3).collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));
list3 = Stream.of(1, 2, 3).collect(Collectors.toCollection(LinkedList::new));

See also:

Why do we use autoboxing and unboxing in Java?

When to use LinkedList over ArrayList?


A
Alan Bateman

In Java 9 you have the even more elegant solution of using immutable lists via the new convenience factory method List.of:

List<String> immutableList = List.of("one","two","three");

(shamelessly copied from here )


FYI, to learn some of the technical details behind this, see JEP 269: Convenience Factory Methods for Collections and a talk by Stuart Marks, the principal author.
B
Bhushan

One-liner:

List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(new Integer[] {1, 2, 3, 4});

R
Radiodef

If you are targeting Java 8 (or later), you can try this:

int[] numbers = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4};
List<Integer> integers = Arrays.stream(numbers)
                        .boxed().collect(Collectors.<Integer>toList());

NOTE:

Pay attention to the Collectors.<Integer>toList(), this generic method helps you to avoid the error "Type mismatch: cannot convert from List<Object> to List<Integer>".


M
Michael

Another workaround if you use Apache commons-lang:

int[] numbers = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 };
Arrays.asList(ArrayUtils.toObject(numbers));

Where ArrayUtils.toObject converts int[] to Integer[]


G
Giancarlo Frison

you have to cast in to array

Arrays.asList((Object[]) array)

java: incompatible types: int[] cannot be converted to java.lang.Object[]
@dVaffection Then cast to int[]. Important part is to cast to an array.
D
Danail Tsvetanov

Using Guava: Integer[] array = { 1, 2, 3}; List list = Lists.newArrayList(sourceArray); Using Apache Commons Collections: Integer[] array = { 1, 2, 3}; List list = new ArrayList<>(6); CollectionUtils.addAll(list, array);


T
TylerH

I've had the same problem and wrote a generic function that takes an array and returns an ArrayList of the same type with the same contents:

public static <T> ArrayList<T> ArrayToArrayList(T[] array) {
    ArrayList<T> list = new ArrayList<T>();
    for(T elmt : array) list.add(elmt);
    return list;
}

A
Arpan Saini

Given Array:

    int[] givenArray = {2,2,3,3,4,5};

Converting integer array to Integer List

One way: boxed() -> returns the IntStream

    List<Integer> givenIntArray1 = Arrays.stream(givenArray)
                                  .boxed()
                                  .collect(Collectors.toList());

Second Way: map each element of the stream to Integer and then collect

NOTE: Using mapToObj you can covert each int element into string stream, char stream etc by casing i to (char)i

    List<Integer> givenIntArray2 = Arrays.stream(givenArray)
                                         .mapToObj(i->i)
                                         .collect(Collectors.toList());

Converting One array Type to Another Type Example:

List<Character> givenIntArray2 = Arrays.stream(givenArray)
                                             .mapToObj(i->(char)i)
                                             .collect(Collectors.toList());

H
Hitesh Garg

So it depends on which Java version you are trying-

Java 7

 Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3);

OR

       final String arr[] = new String[] { "G", "E", "E", "K" };
       final List<String> initialList = new ArrayList<String>() {{
           add("C");
           add("O");
           add("D");
           add("I");
           add("N");
       }};

       // Elements of the array are appended at the end
       Collections.addAll(initialList, arr);

OR

Integer[] arr = new Integer[] { 1, 2, 3 };
Arrays.asList(arr);

In Java 8

int[] num = new int[] {1, 2, 3};
List<Integer> list = Arrays.stream(num)
                        .boxed().collect(Collectors.<Integer>toList())

Reference - http://www.codingeek.com/java/how-to-convert-array-to-list-in-java/


D
DevilCode

Can you improve this answer please as this is what I use but im not 100% clear. It works fine but intelliJ added new WeatherStation[0]. Why the 0 ?

public WeatherStation[] removeElementAtIndex(WeatherStation[] array, int index) { List list = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList(array)); list.remove(index); return list.toArray(new WeatherStation[0]); }


Why should we improve your question? Either you know the answer, or you don´t. You should of course provide an answer that really helps others, not one that confuses more than it helps.
i
ivenpoker

As of Java 8, the following should do

int[] temp = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
List<Integer> tempList = Arrays.stream(temp).boxed().collect(Collectors.toList());

D
Dishant Tanwar

Use this to convert an Array arr to List. Arrays.stream(arr).collect(Collectors.toList());

An example of defining a generic method to convert an array to a list:

public <T> List<T> fromArrayToList(T[] a) {   
    return Arrays.stream(a).collect(Collectors.toList());
}

y
yousef

use two line of code to convert array to list if you use it in integer value you must use autoboxing type for primitive data type

  Integer [] arr={1,2};
  List<Integer> listInt=Arrays.asList(arr);

This is the easiest way and should be marked as the right answer. Thanks @yousef
A
ATOMP

If you are trying to optimize for memory, etc., (and don't want to pull in external libraries) it's simpler than you think to implement your own immutable "array view list" – you just need to extend java.util.AbstractList.

class IntArrayViewList extends AbstractList<Integer> {
    int[] backingArray;
    int size;

    IntArrayViewList(int[] backingArray, int size) {
        this.backingArray = backingArray;
        this.size = size;
    }

    public Iterator<Integer> iterator() {
        return new Iterator<Integer>() {
            int i = 0;

            @Override
            public boolean hasNext() {
                return i < size;
            }

            @Override
            public Integer next() {
                return get(i++);
            }
        };
    }

    public int size() {
        return size;
    }

    public Integer get(int i) {
        return backingArray[i];
    }
}