OHHAI
OHHAI

Reputation: 8225

Easiest way to convert a List to a Set in Java

What is the easiest way to convert a List to a Set in Java?

Upvotes: 797

Views: 793831

Answers (18)

Ashish Gupta
Ashish Gupta

Reputation: 311

EASIEST WAY*

Set foo set = new HashSetfoo(mylist);

System.out.println(set);

Upvotes: 1

Ramesh Papaganti
Ramesh Papaganti

Reputation: 7861

Java- addAll

set.addAll(aList);

Java- new Object

new HashSet<>(list)

Java-8

list.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet());

Using Guva

 Sets.newHashSet(list)

Apache Commons

CollectionUtils.addAll(targetSet, sourceList);

Java 10

var set = Set.copyOf(list);

Upvotes: 91

Vijay Pal Singh
Vijay Pal Singh

Reputation: 37

In Java 1.8, the stream API can be used to convert a list to set. For example, the code below shows the conversion of a list to a set:

List<String> empList = Arrays.asList("java", "python", ".net", "javaScript", "php");
Set<String> set = empList.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet());
set.forEach(value -> System.out.printf("%s ", value));

In case the list contains objects and I want to create a set out of it:

List<Employee> empList = Arrays.asList(new Employee(1, 1000, "Chandra Shekhar", 6000),
new Employee(2, 1000, "Rajesh", 8000), new Employee(3, 1004, "Rahul", 9000),
new Employee(4, 1001, "Suresh", 12000), new Employee(5, 1004, "Satosh", 7000));

Set<String> set = empList.stream().map(emp -> emp.getName()).collect(Collectors.toSet());
System.out.println(set);        

Upvotes: 2

Abdul Alim Shakir
Abdul Alim Shakir

Reputation: 1227

Remember that, converting from List to Set will remove duplicates from collection because List supports duplicates but Set does not support duplicates in Java.

Direct Conversion : The most common and simple way to convert a List to a Set

// Creating a list of strings
List<String> list = Arrays.asList("One", "Two", "Three", "Four");

// Converting a list to set
Set<String> set = new HashSet<>(list);

Apache Commons Collections : You may also use the Commons Collections API to convert a List to a Set :-

// Creating a list of strings
List<String> list = Arrays.asList("One", "Two", "Three", "Four");

// Creating a set with the same number of members in the list 
Set<String> set = new HashSet<>(4);

// Adds all of the elements in the list to the target set
CollectionUtils.addAll(set, list);

Using Stream : Another way is to convert given list to stream, then stream to set :-

// Creating a list of strings 
List<String> list = Arrays.asList("One", "Two", "Three", "Four"); 

// Converting to set using stream 
Set<String> set = list.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet()); 

Upvotes: 12

Donald Raab
Donald Raab

Reputation: 6706

If you use Eclipse Collections:

MutableSet<Integer> mSet = Lists.mutable.with(1, 2, 3).toSet();
MutableIntSet mIntSet = IntLists.mutable.with(1, 2, 3).toSet();

The MutableSet interface extends java.util.Set whereas the MutableIntSet interface does not. You can also convert any Iterable to a Set using the Sets factory class.

Set<Integer> set = Sets.mutable.withAll(List.of(1, 2, 3));

There is more explanation of the mutable factories available in Eclipse Collections here.

If you want an ImmutableSet from a List, you can use the Sets factory as follows:

ImmutableSet<Integer> immutableSet = Sets.immutable.withAll(List.of(1, 2, 3))

Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections

Upvotes: 5

Nirbhay Rana
Nirbhay Rana

Reputation: 4357

The best way to use constructor

Set s= new HashSet(list);

In java 8 you can also use stream api::

Set s= list.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet());

Upvotes: 6

BERGUIGA Mohamed Amine
BERGUIGA Mohamed Amine

Reputation: 6300

For Java 8 it's very easy:

List < UserEntity > vList= new ArrayList<>(); 
vList= service(...);
Set<UserEntity> vSet= vList.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet());

Upvotes: 7

Jacob G.
Jacob G.

Reputation: 29720

With Java 10, you could now use Set#copyOf to easily convert a List<E> to an unmodifiable Set<E>:

Example:

var set = Set.copyOf(list);

Keep in mind that this is an unordered operation, and null elements are not permitted, as it will throw a NullPointerException.

If you wish for it to be modifiable, then simply pass it into the constructor a Set implementation.

Upvotes: 8

Shenal Silva
Shenal Silva

Reputation: 2053

A more Java 8 resilient solution with Optional.ofNullable

Set<Foo> mySet = Optional.ofNullable(myList).map(HashSet::new).orElse(null);

Upvotes: 5

shabunc
shabunc

Reputation: 24781

Let's not forget our relatively new friend, stream API. If you need to preprocess list before converting it to a set, it's better to have something like:

list.stream().<here goes some preprocessing>.collect(Collectors.toSet());

Upvotes: 6

Spina
Spina

Reputation: 9366

I agree with sepp2k, but there are some other details that might matter:

new HashSet<Foo>(myList);

will give you an unsorted set which doesn't have duplicates. In this case, duplication is identified using the .equals() method on your objects. This is done in combination with the .hashCode() method. (For more on equality look here)

An alternative that gives a sorted set is:

new TreeSet<Foo>(myList);

This works if Foo implements Comparable. If it doesn't then you may want to use a comparator:

Set<Foo> lSet = new TreeSet<Foo>(someComparator);
lSet.addAll(myList);

This depends on either compareTo() (from the comparable interface) or compare() (from the comparator) to ensure uniqueness. So, if you just care about uniqueness, use the HashSet. If you're after sorting, then consider the TreeSet. (Remember: Optimize later!) If time efficiency matters use a HashSet if space efficiency matters, look at TreeSet. Note that more efficient implementations of Set and Map are available through Trove (and other locations).

Upvotes: 169

akhil_mittal
akhil_mittal

Reputation: 24167

There are various ways to get a Set as:

    List<Integer> sourceList = new ArrayList();
    sourceList.add(1);
    sourceList.add(2);
    sourceList.add(3);
    sourceList.add(4);

    // Using Core Java
    Set<Integer> set1 = new HashSet<>(sourceList);  //needs null-check if sourceList can be null.

    // Java 8
    Set<Integer> set2 = sourceList.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet());
    Set<Integer> set3 = sourceList.stream().collect(Collectors.toCollection(HashSet::new));

    //Guava
    Set<Integer> set4 = Sets.newHashSet(sourceList);

    // Apache commons
    Set<Integer> set5 = new HashSet<>(4);
    CollectionUtils.addAll(set5, sourceList);

When we use Collectors.toSet() it returns a set and as per the doc:There are no guarantees on the type, mutability, serializability, or thread-safety of the Set returned. If we want to get a HashSet then we can use the other alternative to get a set (check set3).

Upvotes: 4

savanibharat
savanibharat

Reputation: 109

You can convert List<> to Set<>

Set<T> set=new HashSet<T>();

//Added dependency -> If list is null then it will throw NullPointerExcetion.

Set<T> set;
if(list != null){
    set = new HashSet<T>(list);
}

Upvotes: 5

Sandeep Bhardwaj
Sandeep Bhardwaj

Reputation: 1360

Set<E> alphaSet  = new HashSet<E>(<your List>);

or complete example

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.HashSet;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Set;

public class ListToSet
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        List<String> alphaList = new ArrayList<String>();
        alphaList.add("A");
        alphaList.add("B");
        alphaList.add("C");
        alphaList.add("A");
        alphaList.add("B");
        System.out.println("List values .....");
        for (String alpha : alphaList)
        {
            System.out.println(alpha);
        }
        Set<String> alphaSet = new HashSet<String>(alphaList);
        System.out.println("\nSet values .....");
        for (String alpha : alphaSet)
        {
            System.out.println(alpha);
        }
    }
}

Upvotes: 19

sepp2k
sepp2k

Reputation: 370415

Set<Foo> foo = new HashSet<Foo>(myList);

Upvotes: 1277

JimB
JimB

Reputation: 1163

Using java 8 you can use stream:

List<Integer> mylist = Arrays.asList(100, 101, 102);
Set<Integer> myset = mylist.stream().collect(Collectors.toSet()));

Upvotes: 37

Ashish
Ashish

Reputation: 14707

I would perform a Null check before converting to set.

if(myList != null){
Set<Foo> foo = new HashSet<Foo>(myList);
}

Upvotes: 7

Vitalii Fedorenko
Vitalii Fedorenko

Reputation: 114540

If you use the Guava library:

Set<Foo> set = Sets.newHashSet(list);

or, better:

Set<Foo> set = ImmutableSet.copyOf(list);

Upvotes: 75

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