Warm greetings! This lesson introduces data streams, which are essentially continuous datasets. Imagine a weather station or a gaming application gathering data every second — both generate data streams! We will learn how to handle these data streams using Java by accessing individual elements, slicing segments, and converting these streams into strings for easier handling.
In Java, data streams can be represented using collections such as ArrayList
and Map
. We will use a class to encapsulate operations related to these data streams in our Java application. Let's consider a simple Java class named DataStream
:
Java1import java.util.ArrayList; 2import java.util.HashMap; 3import java.util.Map; 4 5class DataStream { 6 private ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data; 7 8 public DataStream(ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data) { 9 this.data = data; 10 } 11}
To use this, we create a sample data stream as an instance of our DataStream
class, where each element is a map with key-value pairs:
Java1class Program { 2 public static void main(String[] args) { 3 ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> sampleData = new ArrayList<>(); 4 5 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 1, "value", 100))); 6 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 2, "value", 200))); 7 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 3, "value", 300))); 8 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 4, "value", 400))); 9 10 DataStream stream = new DataStream(sampleData); 11 } 12}
To look into individual elements of a data stream, we use zero-based indexing. The get
method we introduce below fetches the i
-th element from the data stream:
Java1import java.util.ArrayList; 2import java.util.Map; 3 4class DataStream { 5 private ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data; 6 7 public DataStream(ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data) { 8 this.data = data; 9 } 10 11 public Map<String, Integer> get(int i) { 12 if (i >= 0 && i < data.size()) 13 return data.get(i); 14 15 return null; // Returning null if index is out of bounds 16 } 17}
Here's how we can use the get
method:
Java1class Program { 2 public static void main(String[] args) { 3 ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> sampleData = new ArrayList<>(); 4 5 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 1, "value", 100))); 6 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 2, "value", 200))); 7 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 3, "value", 300))); 8 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 4, "value", 400))); 9 10 DataStream stream = new DataStream(sampleData); 11 12 Map<String, Integer> element = stream.get(2); 13 if (element != null) 14 System.out.println(element.get("id")); // Output: 3 15 16 element = stream.get(-1); 17 System.out.println(element == null); // Output: true 18 } 19}
In essence, stream.get(2)
fetches us the map with { "id": 3, "value": 300 }
.
To fetch a range of elements, we can use slicing. Java offers methods like subList
in ArrayList
to achieve this. Here's how you might implement a slice
method:
Java1import java.util.ArrayList; 2import java.util.Map; 3 4class DataStream { 5 private ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data; 6 7 public DataStream(ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data) { 8 this.data = data; 9 } 10 11 public Map<String, Integer> get(int i) { 12 if (i >= 0 && i < data.size()) 13 return data.get(i); 14 15 return null; // Returning null if index is out of bounds 16 } 17 18 public ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> slice(int i, int j) { 19 return new ArrayList<>(data.subList(i, j)); 20 } 21}
Here's a quick usage example:
Java1class Program { 2 public static void main(String[] args) { 3 ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> sampleData = new ArrayList<>(); 4 5 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 1, "value", 100))); 6 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 2, "value", 200))); 7 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 3, "value", 300))); 8 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 4, "value", 400))); 9 10 DataStream stream = new DataStream(sampleData); 11 12 ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> slicedStream = stream.slice(1, 3); 13 for (Map<String, Integer> item : slicedStream) { 14 System.out.println(item.get("id")); // Output: 2, 3 15 } 16 } 17}
For better readability, we may want to convert our data streams into strings. In Java, we can utilize libraries like Gson
to achieve this. Below is an example of implementing the toString
method:
Java1import com.google.gson.Gson; 2import java.util.ArrayList; 3import java.util.Map; 4 5class DataStream { 6 private ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data; 7 private Gson gson = new Gson(); 8 9 public DataStream(ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> data) { 10 this.data = data; 11 } 12 13 public Map<String, Integer> get(int i) { 14 if (i >= 0 && i < data.size()) 15 return data.get(i); 16 17 return null; 18 } 19 20 public ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> slice(int i, int j) { 21 return new ArrayList<>(data.subList(i, j)); 22 } 23 24 @Override 25 public String toString() { 26 return gson.toJson(this.data); 27 } 28}
To demonstrate:
Java1class Program { 2 public static void main(String[] args) { 3 ArrayList<Map<String, Integer>> sampleData = new ArrayList<>(); 4 5 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 1, "value", 100))); 6 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 2, "value", 200))); 7 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 3, "value", 300))); 8 sampleData.add(new HashMap<>(Map.of("id", 4, "value", 400))); 9 10 DataStream stream = new DataStream(sampleData); 11 12 System.out.println(stream.toString()); 13 // Output: [{"id":1,"value":100},{"id":2,"value":200},{"id":3,"value":300},{"id":4,"value":400}] 14 } 15}
In this lesson, we explored data streams and how to represent and manipulate them using Java collections like ArrayList
. We crafted a class that encapsulates operations on data streams in Java, including accessing elements, slicing ranges, and converting streams to string representations.
Now it's time to apply your newfound knowledge in the practice exercises that follow!