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Thanks for contributing this! I'll look it over later.
Original comment by jared.l....@gmail.com
on 19 Dec 2007 at 9:13
I apologize for taking so long to examine this.
Google's internal code base has a Pair class, which we didn't include in the
current
release of Google Collections but may in the future. Your Tuple class expands
Pair in
two dimensions: supporting tuples of 1-5 elements and including additional
methods.
While the tuple syntax is really nice in Python, I'm reluctant to add tuples of
more
than two values to Java. A value class would generally lead to more readable
code,
even though it requires more keystrokes.
I'm not sure whether we'd want Pair versions of your map, zip, unzip, and
rotate2
(swap) methods. The question is how often such methods would be called.
FYI, adding equals(), hashCode(), toString(), and serialization to each class
would
make them more usable.
Original comment by jared.l....@gmail.com
on 25 Feb 2008 at 10:18
Thanks for your assessment. Taking your points in order:
1. I agree that T2 (Pair) is the most important tuple; but in languages that
have
tuples I have used bigger ones, hence I went to T5 as a compromise between 2 and
infinity (Scala goes to 22). T1 is needed when processing tuple data
recursively, it
is a list of one element. Testing if the tuple has size 1 acts as a terminating
case
for recursive processing, hence T0 isn't needed. However as a matter of style
people
might like a T0, the empty list.
2. For readability on something exposed publicly I am suggesting that people
write a
value class by extending one of the tuple classes. This way they have minimum
typing
and retain all the nice tuple functionality but have both a formally documented
class
(via Javadoc) and an informally documented class via getter names. This is an
advantage a tuple API has over a built in tuple construct in some languages;
you can
extend a tuple class (Scala also allows tuple extension). Also, since the
tuples are
built hierarchically (a T5 is a T4 ... is a T1), recursive algorithms are easy.
3. The methods provided for tuples are a matter of taste, the ones I gave are
the
ones I find useful and are typical of many languages (e.g. Haskell). Many
languages
have a map literal, I am using a T2 as a map literal. A method I thought of
adding,
but didn't, was a multimap constructor from tuples used as multimap literals.
As I
say, the exact method choice is a matter of taste.
4. equals, hashCode, toString are inherited from AbstractList. The tuples are
Object
Lists. This is useful because many methods understand Lists or Iterables and
because
for each understands Iterables.
Original comment by howard.l...@gmail.com
on 26 Feb 2008 at 7:09
Tuples are indeed very useful. We have our own lgpl tuples available here:
http://openhms.sourceforge.net/common-util/apidocs/index.html
One suggestion i might add for the usefulness of Tuple2 is to make it a
Map.Entry
(and equals/hashCode compatible), cause there is no default implementation of
Map.Entry in the jdk, and it's very useful to have.
Original comment by jahlborn@gmail.com
on 26 Feb 2008 at 10:03
Unfortunately, it's not possible for a 2-element object to implement both List
and
Map.Entry because of their conflicting hashCode() requirements:
List.hashCode():
int hashCode = 1;
Iterator<E> i = list.iterator();
while (i.hasNext()) {
E obj = i.next();
hashCode = 31*hashCode + (obj==null ? 0 : obj.hashCode());
}
Map.Entry.hashCode():
(e.getKey()==null ? 0 : e.getKey().hashCode()) ^
(e.getValue()==null ? 0 : e.getValue().hashCode())
If you do need a Map.Entry implementation, Google Collections provides one
through
com.google.common.collect.Maps.immutableEntry().
Original comment by cpov...@google.com
on 26 Feb 2008 at 10:18
Thanks for the comments.
@Jared: I forgot to mention Serialization in my previous reply to you; yes I
should
add this.
@jahlborn: Your tuple library is very similar. Either great minds think alike or
fools rarely differ - you decide which :)
@cpov...: It is indeed a pity that the hash code is different. In my own code I
do
compare T2s with Map.Entrys and I also create maps from T2s using the T2s as map
literals. So I haven't actually needed a T2 to be a Map.Entry. If however
others have
a need then toMapEntry could be added to T2 and toT2 added to
com.google.common.collect.Maps.immutableEntry's return class (provided that this
class was made public). I also notice
com.google.common.collect.Maps.containsEntry
and in a similar vein isInMap(Map map) could be added to T2, if there were
demand.
As a criticism (constructive) of my own code I would add that I extended
AbstractList, unfortunately this comes with the baggage of field modCount. I
should
really extend AbstractCollection and do the extra work of implementing iterator
etc.
Original comment by howard.l...@gmail.com
on 27 Feb 2008 at 6:47
@cpov...: yes, we sacrificed list hashCode compatibility for Map.Entry
compatibility, which we use far more. in fact, i don't think we've ever used a
list
as a key in a HashMap.
@howard.lovatt: i prefer the term "wisdomly-challenged".
Original comment by jahlborn@gmail.com
on 28 Feb 2008 at 8:25
While there are some good ideas here, I don't see us including this in the
Google
Collection Libraries.
There are other ways of making it easier to create value objects, which is the
underlying goal, but I'm not sure which, if any, of those we'll use.
Original comment by jared.l....@gmail.com
on 18 Jun 2008 at 9:25
@jared.l.levy: You mentioned future possible inclusion of your Pair class into
google-collections, is it still considered? I'd like to vote for this.
Original comment by earwin@gmail.com
on 6 Mar 2009 at 2:56
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
howard.l...@gmail.com
on 4 Dec 2007 at 7:36Attachments: