How can I slice an ArrayList out of an ArrayList in Java?

JavaArraylist

Java Problem Overview


How do I get an array slice of an ArrayList in Java? Specifically I want to do something like this:

ArrayList<Integer> inputA = input.subList(0, input.size()/2);
// where 'input' is a prepouplated ArrayList<Integer>

So I expected this to work, but Java returns a List - so it's incompatible. And when I try to cast it, Java won't let me. I need an ArrayList - what can I do?

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

In Java, it is good practice to use interface types rather than concrete classes in APIs.

Your problem is that you1 are using ArrayList (probably in lots of places) where you should really be using List. As a result you created problems for yourself with an unnecessary constraint that the list is an ArrayList.

This is what your code should look like:

List input = new ArrayList(...);

public void doSomething(List input) {
   List inputA = input.subList(0, input.size()/2);
   ...
}

this.doSomething(input);

1 - Based on your comments, "you" was actually someone else ... who set this problem in an interview question. It is possible that this was actually a trick question, designed to see how you would cope with creating a (real) slice of an ArrayList that was a assignment compatible with ArrayList.


Your proposed "solution" to the problem was/is this:

new ArrayList(input.subList(0, input.size()/2))

That works by making a copy of the sublist. It is not a slice in the normal sense. Furthermore, if the sublist is big, then making the copy will be expensive.


If you are constrained by APIs that you cannot change, such that you have to declare inputA as an ArrayList, you might be able to implement a custom subclass of ArrayList in which the subList method returns a subclass of ArrayList. However:

  1. It would be a lot of work to design, implement and test.
  2. You have now added significant new class to your code base, possibly with dependencies on undocumented aspects (and therefore "subject to change") aspects of the ArrayList class.
  3. You would need to change relevant places in your codebase where you are creating ArrayList instances to create instances of your subclass instead.

The "copy the array" solution is more practical ... bearing in mind that these are not true slices.

Solution 2 - Java

I have found a way if you know startIndex and endIndex of the elements one need to remove from ArrayList

Let al be the original ArrayList and startIndex,endIndex be start and end index to be removed from the array respectively:

al.subList(startIndex, endIndex + 1).clear();

Solution 3 - Java

If there is no existing method then I guess you can iterate from 0 to input.size()/2, taking each consecutive element and appending it to a new ArrayList.

EDIT: Actually, I think you can take that List and use it to instantiate a new ArrayList using one of the ArrayList constructors.

Solution 4 - Java

Although this post is very old. In case if somebody is looking for this..

Guava facilitates partitioning the List into sublists of a specified size

List<Integer> intList = Lists.newArrayList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8);
    List<List<Integer>> subSets = Lists.partition(intList, 3);

Solution 5 - Java

This is how I solved it. I forgot that sublist was a direct reference to the elements in the original list, so it makes sense why it wouldn't work.

ArrayList<Integer> inputA = new ArrayList<Integer>(input.subList(0, input.size()/2));

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Solution 1 - JavaStephen CView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavaAman GuptaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavaJorge Israel PeñaView Answer on Stackoverflow
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Solution 5 - JavaB TView Answer on Stackoverflow