The Google Guava libraries has many useful classes and methods. Normally I write code in Groovy and I am used to working with collections in an intuitive way. But sometimes I need to work with Java on my project and then the Google Guava libraries are a great alternative.
Suppose I want to check if all elements in a collection apply to a certain condition. In Groovy I would write this:
final List<String> list = ['Groovy', 'Rocks'] assert list.every { it.contains('o') }
Now in Java and Google Guava I have the following snippet:
import com.google.common.base.Predicate; import com.google.common.collect.Iterables; import com.google.common.collect.Lists; import java.util.List; final List<String> list = Lists.newArrayList("Google", "Guava"); final Predicate<String> startWithG = new Predicate<String>() { @Override public boolean apply(final String stringValue) { return stringValue.startsWith("G"); } }; assert Iterables.all(list, startWithG);
If we use a regular expression pattern we can even simplify the previous code to:
import com.google.common.base.Predicates; import com.google.common.collect.Iterables; import com.google.common.collect.Lists; import java.util.List; final List<String> list = Lists.newArrayList("Google", "Guava"); final Predicate startWithG = Predicates.containsPattern("^G"); assert Iterables.all(list, startWithG);
(Sample with Google Guava version 13.0.1)