If I want to make two lists into one in Java, I can use ListUtils.union(List list1,List list2)
. But what if I want to combine multiple lists?
This works:
import org.apache.commons.collections.ListUtils;
List<Integer>list1=Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
List<Integer>list2=Arrays.asList(4,5,6);
List<Integer>list3=Arrays.asList(7,8,9);
List<Integer>list4=Arrays.asList(10,0,-1);
System.out.println(ListUtils.union(ListUtils.union(list1, list2),ListUtils.union(list3, list4)));
But it doesn't really look like the best solution, neither is it particularly great to read. Sadly ListUtils.union(list1,list2,list3,list4)
doesn't work. Using addAll
multiple times and creating its own list just for that with duplicates of all the entries also doesn't seem ideal to me. So what can I do instead?
Java 8 has an easy way of doing it with the help of Stream API shown in the code below. We have basically created a stream with all the lists , and then as we need the individual contents of the lists, there is a need to flatten it with flatMap
and finally collect the elements in a List
.
List<Integer>list1=Arrays.asList(1,2,3);
List<Integer>list2=Arrays.asList(4,5,6);
List<Integer>list3=Arrays.asList(7,8,9);
List<Integer>list4=Arrays.asList(10,0,-1);
List<Integer> newList = Stream.of(list1, list2, list3,list4)
.flatMap(Collection::stream)
.collect(Collectors.toList());
System.out.println(newList); // prints [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 0, -1]