How do I use Collectors.filtering() introduced in Java 9?

In Java 9, the Collectors.filtering method was introduced to the Stream API as part of java.util.stream.Collectors. It allows you to apply a filter to elements of a stream before collecting them into a downstream collector (e.g., toList, toSet, etc.).

This can be particularly useful when you want to filter elements as part of the data collection pipeline.


Syntax

static <T, A, R> Collector<T, ?, R> filtering(Predicate<? super T> predicate, Collector<? super T, A, R> downstream)
  • predicate: A filter condition to be applied (e.g., a lambda expression).
  • downstream: The collector that will gather the filtered elements (e.g., Collectors.toList()).

How It Works

  1. The filtering method applies the specified Predicate to filter the elements of the stream.
  2. Only the elements that match the predicate are passed to the downstream collector.
  3. The filtered results are then collected as specified by the downstream collector.

Usage Example

Here’s a basic example of using Collectors.filtering:

Collecting only even integers from a list:

package org.kodejava.util.stream;

import java.util.List;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;

public class FilteringExample {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10);

        // Apply filtering before collecting to a list
        List<Integer> evenNumbers = numbers.stream()
                .collect(Collectors.filtering(n -> n % 2 == 0, Collectors.toList()));

        System.out.println("Even Numbers: " + evenNumbers);
    }
}

Output:

Even Numbers: [2, 4, 6, 8, 10]

Filtering with Downstream Grouping

You can use filtering in more complex collectors, such as those involving grouping. For example:

Grouping strings by their first character and filtering only strings longer than 3 characters:

package org.kodejava.util.stream;

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;

public class FilteringWithGrouping {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        List<String> words = List.of("apple", "ant", "banana", "bat", "cat", "car", "dog");

        // Group by the first character and filter words with length > 3
        Map<Character, List<String>> filteredWordsByGroup = words.stream()
                .collect(Collectors.groupingBy(
                        word -> word.charAt(0), // Grouping by the first character
                        Collectors.filtering(
                                word -> word.length() > 3, // Filter words with length > 3
                                Collectors.toList() // Collect filtered words into a list
                        )
                ));

        System.out.println("Filtered Words: " + filteredWordsByGroup);
    }
}

Output:

Filtered Words: {a=[apple], b=[banana], c=[cat, car], d=[dog]}

When to Use

Collectors.filtering is particularly useful for:

  1. Grouped collections: Applying a filter while grouping elements.
  2. Custom collections: Collecting filtered elements into different collection types without needing an intermediate filtered stream.
  3. Improved readability: Reduces the need for chaining multiple Stream.filter() calls in complex data processing.

Overall, Collectors.filtering makes streams more flexible and concise for advanced data collection scenarios!

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