Reputation: 1615
For lists, we use the Collections.sort(List)
method. What if we want to sort a HashSet
?
Upvotes: 151
Views: 399589
Reputation: 12582
Add all your objects to the TreeSet
, you will get a sorted Set. Below is a raw example.
HashSet myHashSet = new HashSet();
myHashSet.add(1);
myHashSet.add(23);
myHashSet.add(45);
myHashSet.add(12);
TreeSet myTreeSet = new TreeSet();
myTreeSet.addAll(myHashSet);
System.out.println(myTreeSet); // Prints [1, 12, 23, 45]
You can also use TreeSet
's constructor that takes a HashSet
as a parameter.
HashSet myHashSet = new HashSet();
myHashSet.add(1);
myHashSet.add(23);
myHashSet.add(45);
myHashSet.add(12);
TreeSet myTreeSet = new TreeSet(myHashSet);
System.out.println(myTreeSet); // Prints [1, 12, 23, 45]
Thanks @mounika for the update.
Set<Integer> myHashSet = new HashSet<>();
myHashSet.add(1);
myHashSet.add(23);
myHashSet.add(45);
myHashSet.add(12);
LinkedHashSet<Integer> ascendingSortedSet = myHashSet.stream()
.sorted()
.collect(Collectors.toCollection(LinkedHashSet::new)); // Prints [1, 12, 23, 45]
LinkedHashSet<Integer> descendingSortedSet = myHashSet.stream()
.sorted(Comparator.reverseOrder())
.collect(Collectors.toCollection(LinkedHashSet::new)); // Prints [45, 23, 12, 1]
Upvotes: 94
Reputation: 1356
If you want want the end Collection
to be in the form of Set
and if you want to define your own natural order
rather than that of TreeSet
then -
HashSet
into List
List
using Comparator
List
into LinkedHashSet
to maintain orderLinkedHashSet
package demo31;
import java.util.*;
public class App26 {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Set<String> set = new HashSet<>();
addElements(set);
List<String> list = new LinkedList<>();
list = convertToList(set);
Collections.sort(list, new Comparator<String>() {
@Override
public int compare(String s1, String s2) {
int flag = s2.length() - s1.length();
if(flag != 0) {
return flag;
} else {
return -s1.compareTo(s2);
}
}
});
Set<String> set2 = new LinkedHashSet<>();
set2 = convertToSet(list);
displayElements(set2);
}
public static void addElements(Set<String> set) {
set.add("Hippopotamus");
set.add("Rhinocerous");
set.add("Zebra");
set.add("Tiger");
set.add("Giraffe");
set.add("Cheetah");
set.add("Wolf");
set.add("Fox");
set.add("Dog");
set.add("Cat");
}
public static List<String> convertToList(Set<String> set) {
List<String> list = new LinkedList<>();
for(String element: set) {
list.add(element);
}
return list;
}
public static Set<String> convertToSet(List<String> list) {
Set<String> set = new LinkedHashSet<>();
for(String element: list) {
set.add(element);
}
return set;
}
public static void displayElements(Set<String> set) {
System.out.println(set);
}
}
Output -
[Hippopotamus, Rhinocerous, Giraffe, Cheetah, Zebra, Tiger, Wolf, Fox, Dog, Cat]
Here the collection has been sorted as -
First - Descending order of String
length
Second - Descending order of String
alphabetical hierarchy
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1711
Convert HashSet
to List
then sort it using Collection.sort()
List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>(hset);
Collections.sort(List)
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 45
The below is my sample code and its already answered by pointing the code in comments , am still sharing because it contains the complete code
package Collections;
import java.util.*;
public class TestSet {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Set<String> objset = new HashSet<>();
objset.add("test");
objset.add("abc");
objset.add("abc");
objset.add("mas");
objset.add("vas");
Iterator itset = objset.iterator();
while(itset.hasNext())
{
System.out.println(itset.next());
}
TreeSet<String> treeobj = new TreeSet(objset);
System.out.println(treeobj);
}
}
TreeSet treeobj = new TreeSet(objset); here we are invoking the treeset constructor which will call the addAll method to add the objects .
See this below code from the TreeSet class how its mentioned ,
public TreeSet(Collection<? extends E> c) {
this();
addAll(c);
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4207
Elements in HashSet can't be sorted. Whenever you put elements into HashSet, it can mess up the ordering of the whole set. It is deliberately designed like that for performance. When you don't care about the order, HashSet will be the most efficient set for frequent insertions and queries.
TreeSet is the alternative that you can use. When you iterate on the tree set, you will get sorted elements automatically. But it will adjust the tree to try to remain sorted every time you insert an element.
Perhaps, what you are trying to do is to sort just once. In that case, TreeSet is not the most efficient option because it needs to determine the placing of newly added elements all the time. Use TreeSet only when you want to sort often.
If you only need to sort once, use ArrayList. Create a new list and add all the elements then sort it once. If you want to retain only unique elements (remove all duplicates), then put the list into a LinkedHashSet, it will retain the order you have already sorted.
List<Integer> list = new ArrayList<>();
list.add(6);
list.add(4);
list.add(4);
list.add(5);
Collections.sort(list);
Set<Integer> unique = new LinkedHashSet<>(list); // 4 5 6
Now, you've gotten a sorted set if you want it in a list form then convert it into list.
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1664
Just in-case you don't wanna use a TreeSet
you could try this using java stream for concise code.
set = set.stream().sorted().collect(Collectors.toCollection(LinkedHashSet::new));
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 111
Based on the answer given by @LazerBanana i will put my own example of a Set sorted by the Id of the Object:
Set<Clazz> yourSet = [...];
yourSet.stream().sorted(new Comparator<Clazz>() {
@Override
public int compare(Clazz o1, Clazz o2) {
return o1.getId().compareTo(o2.getId());
}
}).collect(Collectors.toList()); // Returns the sorted List (using toSet() wont work)
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 2096
You can wrap it in a TreeSet like this:
Set mySet = new HashSet();
mySet.add(4);
mySet.add(5);
mySet.add(3);
mySet.add(1);
System.out.println("mySet items "+ mySet);
TreeSet treeSet = new TreeSet(mySet);
System.out.println("treeSet items "+ treeSet);
output :
mySet items [1, 3, 4, 5]
treeSet items [1, 3, 4, 5]
Set mySet = new HashSet();
mySet.add("five");
mySet.add("elf");
mySet.add("four");
mySet.add("six");
mySet.add("two");
System.out.println("mySet items "+ mySet);
TreeSet treeSet = new TreeSet(mySet);
System.out.println("treeSet items "+ treeSet);
output:
mySet items [six, four, five, two, elf]
treeSet items [elf, five, four, six, two]
requirement for this method is that the objects of the set/list should be comparable (implement the Comparable interface)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 771
SortedSet has been added Since java 7 https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/SortedSet.html
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8601
Use java.util.TreeSet
as the actual object. When you iterate over this collection, the values come back in a well-defined order.
If you use java.util.HashSet
then the order depends on an internal hash function which is almost certainly not lexicographic (based on content).
Upvotes: 16
Reputation: 2611
A HashSet does not guarantee any order of its elements. If you need this guarantee, consider using a TreeSet to hold your elements.
However if you just need your elements sorted for this one occurrence, then just temporarily create a List and sort that:
Set<?> yourHashSet = new HashSet<>();
...
List<?> sortedList = new ArrayList<>(yourHashSet);
Collections.sort(sortedList);
Upvotes: 157
Reputation: 10142
In my humble opinion , LazerBanana's answer should be the top rated answer & accepted because all the other answers pointing to java.util.TreeSet
( or first convert to list then call Collections.sort(...)
on the converted list ) didn't bothered to ask OP as what kind of objects your HashSet
has i.e. if those elements have a predefined natural ordering or not & that is not optional question but a mandatory question.
You just can't go in & start putting your HashSet
elements into a TreeSet
if element type doesn't already implement Comparable
interface or if you are not explicitly passing Comparator
to TreeSet
constructor.
From TreeSet
JavaDoc ,
Constructs a new, empty tree set, sorted according to the natural ordering of its elements. All elements inserted into the set must implement the Comparable interface. Furthermore, all such elements must be mutually comparable: e1.compareTo(e2) must not throw a ClassCastException for any elements e1 and e2 in the set. If the user attempts to add an element to the set that violates this constraint (for example, the user attempts to add a string element to a set whose elements are integers), the add call will throw a ClassCastException.
That is why only all Java8 stream based answers - where you define your comparator on the spot - only make sense because implementing comparable in POJO becomes optional. Programmer defines comparator as and when needed. Trying to collect into TreeSet
without asking this fundamental question is also incorrect ( Ninja's answer). Assuming object types to be String
or Integer
is also incorrect.
Having said that, other concerns like ,
should be the other relevant points too. Just pointing to API shouldn't be only intention.
Since Original set already contains only unique elements & that constraint is also maintained by sorted set so original set needs to be cleared from memory since data is duplicated.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 2098
You can use Java 8 collectors and TreeSet
list.stream().collect(Collectors.toCollection(TreeSet::new))
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 463
You can use guava library for the same
Set<String> sortedSet = FluentIterable.from(myHashSet).toSortedSet(new Comparator<String>() {
@Override
public int compare(String s1, String s2) {
// descending order of relevance
//required code
}
});
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 123
We can not decide that the elements of a HashSet would be sorted automatically. But we can sort them by converting into TreeSet or any List like ArrayList or LinkedList etc.
// Create a TreeSet object of class E
TreeSet<E> ts = new TreeSet<E> ();
// Convert your HashSet into TreeSet
ts.addAll(yourHashSet);
System.out.println(ts.toString() + "\t Sorted Automatically");
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 7221
Java 8 way to sort it would be:
fooHashSet.stream()
.sorted(Comparator.comparing(Foo::getSize)) //comparator - how you want to sort it
.collect(Collectors.toList()); //collector - what you want to collect it to
*Foo::getSize
it's an example how to sort the HashSet of YourItem's naturally by size.
*Collectors.toList()
is going to collect the result of sorting into a List the you will need to capture it with List<Foo> sortedListOfFoo =
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 1658
1. Add all set element in list -> al.addAll(s);
2. Sort all the elements in list using -> Collections.sort(al);
public class SortSetProblem {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ArrayList<String> al = new ArrayList();
Set<String> s = new HashSet<>();
s.add("ved");
s.add("prakash");
s.add("sharma");
s.add("apple");
s.add("ved");
s.add("banana");
System.out.println("Before Sorting");
for (String s1 : s) {
System.out.print(" " + s1);
}
System.out.println("After Sorting");
al.addAll(s);
Collections.sort(al);
for (String set : al) {
System.out.print(" " + set);
}
}
}
input - ved prakash sharma apple ved banana
Output - apple banana prakash sharma ved
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 3072
You can use TreeSet as mentioned in other answers.
Here's a little more elaboration on how to use it:
TreeSet<String> ts = new TreeSet<String>();
ts.add("b1");
ts.add("b3");
ts.add("b2");
ts.add("a1");
ts.add("a2");
System.out.println(ts);
for (String s: ts)
System.out.println(s);
Output:
[a1, a2, a3, a4, a5]
a1
a2
b1
b2
b3
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 101
you can do this in the following ways:
Method 1:
Method 2:
Method 2 is more preferable because the other method consumes lot of time to transfer data back and forth between hashset and list.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 4878
This simple command did the trick for me:
myHashSet.toList.sorted
I used this within a print statement, so if you need to actually persist the ordering, you may need to use TreeSets or other structures proposed on this thread.
Upvotes: -4