Arrays
  public
  
  final
  
  class
  Arrays
  
    extends Object
  
  
  
  
  
  
| java.lang.Object | |
| ↳ | java.util.Arrays | 
This class contains various methods for manipulating arrays (such as sorting and searching). This class also contains a static factory that allows arrays to be viewed as lists.
The methods in this class all throw a NullPointerException,
 if the specified array reference is null, except where noted.
 
The documentation for the methods contained in this class includes
 brief descriptions of the implementations. Such descriptions should
 be regarded as implementation notes, rather than parts of the
 specification. Implementors should feel free to substitute other
 algorithms, so long as the specification itself is adhered to. (For
 example, the algorithm used by sort(Object[]) does not have to be
 a MergeSort, but it does have to be stable.)
 
This class is a member of the Java Collections Framework.
Summary
| Public methods | |
|---|---|
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        List<T> | 
      asList(T... a)
      Returns a fixed-size list backed by the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(byte[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, byte key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of bytes for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(long[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, long key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of longs for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(short[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, short key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of shorts for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      binarySearch(T[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, T key, Comparator<? super T> c)
      Searches a range of the specified array for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(short[] a, short key)
      Searches the specified array of shorts for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Object key)
      Searches a range of the specified array for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(int[] a, int key)
      Searches the specified array of ints for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(double[] a, double key)
      Searches the specified array of doubles for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(float[] a, float key)
      Searches the specified array of floats for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(char[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, char key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of chars for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(long[] a, long key)
      Searches the specified array of longs for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(float[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, float key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of floats for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(int[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, int key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of ints for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(byte[] a, byte key)
      Searches the specified array of bytes for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(Object[] a, Object key)
      Searches the specified array for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(double[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, double key)
      Searches a range of the specified array of doubles for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      binarySearch(char[] a, char key)
      Searches the specified array of chars for the specified value using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      binarySearch(T[] a, T key, Comparator<? super T> c)
      Searches the specified array for the specified object using the binary search algorithm. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      compare(T[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, T[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(byte[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, byte[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(char[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, char[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(float[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, float[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(float[] a, float[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(short[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, short[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      compare(T[] a, T[] b, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(int[] a, int[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(boolean[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, boolean[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(boolean[] a, boolean[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T extends Comparable<? super T>>
        int | 
      compare(T[] a, T[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(double[] a, double[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T extends Comparable<? super T>>
        int | 
      compare(T[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, T[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(long[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, long[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(int[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, int[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(long[] a, long[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(byte[] a, byte[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(double[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, double[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(short[] a, short[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compare(char[] a, char[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(byte[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, byte[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(int[] a, int[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(short[] a, short[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(int[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, int[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(short[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, short[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(byte[] a, byte[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(long[] a, long[] b)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      compareUnsigned(long[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, long[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Compares two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        float[] | 
      copyOf(float[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        T[] | 
      copyOf(T[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with nulls (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        char[] | 
      copyOf(char[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with null characters (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double[] | 
      copyOf(double[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean[] | 
      copyOf(boolean[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int[] | 
      copyOf(int[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        long[] | 
      copyOf(long[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        short[] | 
      copyOf(short[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T, U>
        T[] | 
      copyOf(U[] original, int newLength, Class<? extends T[]> newType)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with nulls (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        byte[] | 
      copyOf(byte[] original, int newLength)
      Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary) so the copy has the specified length. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        double[] | 
      copyOfRange(double[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        float[] | 
      copyOfRange(float[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T, U>
        T[] | 
      copyOfRange(U[] original, int from, int to, Class<? extends T[]> newType)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        T[] | 
      copyOfRange(T[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        char[] | 
      copyOfRange(char[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        long[] | 
      copyOfRange(long[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int[] | 
      copyOfRange(int[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean[] | 
      copyOfRange(boolean[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        short[] | 
      copyOfRange(short[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        byte[] | 
      copyOfRange(byte[] original, int from, int to)
      Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      deepEquals(Object[] a1, Object[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      deepHashCode(Object[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the "deep contents" of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      deepToString(Object[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the "deep contents" of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(double[] a, double[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(long[] a, long[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(short[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, short[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of shorts, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(char[] a, char[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(float[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, float[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of floats, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(int[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, int[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of ints, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(float[] a, float[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(short[] a, short[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(byte[] a, byte[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        boolean | 
      equals(T[] a, T[] a2, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(byte[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, byte[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of bytes, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(boolean[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, boolean[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of booleans, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(Object[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, Object[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(double[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, double[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of doubles, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(Object[] a, Object[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(char[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, char[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of chars, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(boolean[] a, boolean[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(int[] a, int[] a2)
      Returns  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        boolean | 
      equals(long[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, long[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of longs, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        boolean | 
      equals(T[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, T[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(float[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, float val)
      Assigns the specified float value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of floats. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(byte[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, byte val)
      Assigns the specified byte value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of bytes. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(char[] a, char val)
      Assigns the specified char value to each element of the specified array of chars. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(boolean[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, boolean val)
      Assigns the specified boolean value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of booleans. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(Object[] a, Object val)
      Assigns the specified Object reference to each element of the specified array of Objects. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(long[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, long val)
      Assigns the specified long value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of longs. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Object val)
      Assigns the specified Object reference to each element of the specified range of the specified array of Objects. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(float[] a, float val)
      Assigns the specified float value to each element of the specified array of floats. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(char[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, char val)
      Assigns the specified char value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of chars. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(double[] a, double val)
      Assigns the specified double value to each element of the specified array of doubles. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(long[] a, long val)
      Assigns the specified long value to each element of the specified array of longs. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(byte[] a, byte val)
      Assigns the specified byte value to each element of the specified array of bytes. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(int[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, int val)
      Assigns the specified int value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of ints. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(double[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, double val)
      Assigns the specified double value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of doubles. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(short[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, short val)
      Assigns the specified short value to each element of the specified range of the specified array of shorts. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(boolean[] a, boolean val)
      Assigns the specified boolean value to each element of the specified array of booleans. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(short[] a, short val)
      Assigns the specified short value to each element of the specified array of shorts. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      fill(int[] a, int val)
      Assigns the specified int value to each element of the specified array of ints. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(boolean[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(int[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(short[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(double[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(byte[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(char[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(long[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(float[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      hashCode(Object[] a)
      Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(int[] a, int[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(short[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, short[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(float[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, float[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(boolean[] a, boolean[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(Object[] a, Object[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(long[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, long[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      mismatch(T[] a, T[] b, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(boolean[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, boolean[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        int | 
      mismatch(T[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, T[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(double[] a, double[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(char[] a, char[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(int[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, int[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(byte[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, byte[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(short[] a, short[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(double[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, double[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(float[] a, float[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(long[] a, long[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(byte[] a, byte[] b)
      Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(Object[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, Object[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        int | 
      mismatch(char[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, char[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
      Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(long[] array, LongBinaryOperator op)
      Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place, using the supplied function. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(long[] array, int fromIndex, int toIndex, LongBinaryOperator op)
      Performs  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(double[] array, int fromIndex, int toIndex, DoubleBinaryOperator op)
      Performs  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(double[] array, DoubleBinaryOperator op)
      Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place, using the supplied function. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(T[] array, int fromIndex, int toIndex, BinaryOperator<T> op)
      Performs  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(T[] array, BinaryOperator<T> op)
      Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place, using the supplied function. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(int[] array, int fromIndex, int toIndex, IntBinaryOperator op)
      Performs  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelPrefix(int[] array, IntBinaryOperator op)
      Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place, using the supplied function. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSetAll(double[] array, IntToDoubleFunction generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSetAll(int[] array, IntUnaryOperator generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSetAll(long[] array, IntToLongFunction generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      parallelSetAll(T[] array, IntFunction<? extends T> generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      parallelSort(T[] a, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Sorts the specified array of objects according to the order induced by the specified comparator. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(long[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(short[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(double[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(char[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(float[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(byte[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(int[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(float[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(byte[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(short[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(double[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T extends Comparable<? super T>>
        void | 
      parallelSort(T[] a)
      Sorts the specified array of objects into ascending order, according to the natural ordering of its elements. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(char[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(long[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      parallelSort(int[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T extends Comparable<? super T>>
        void | 
      parallelSort(T[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects into ascending order, according to the natural ordering of its elements. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      parallelSort(T[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Comparator<? super T> cmp)
      Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects according to the order induced by the specified comparator. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      setAll(long[] array, IntToLongFunction generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      setAll(int[] array, IntUnaryOperator generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      setAll(T[] array, IntFunction<? extends T> generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      setAll(double[] array, IntToDoubleFunction generator)
      Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      sort(T[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Comparator<? super T> c)
      Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects according to the order induced by the specified comparator. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(long[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(float[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        void | 
      sort(T[] a, Comparator<? super T> c)
      Sorts the specified array of objects according to the order induced by the specified comparator. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(char[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(double[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(int[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(long[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(double[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(short[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(char[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(short[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(byte[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects into ascending order, according to the natural ordering of its elements. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(Object[] a)
      Sorts the specified array of objects into ascending order, according to the natural ordering of its elements. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(int[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(byte[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
      Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        void | 
      sort(float[] a)
      Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfLong | 
      spliterator(long[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfLong | 
      spliterator(long[] array)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        Spliterator<T> | 
      spliterator(T[] array)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfDouble | 
      spliterator(double[] array)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfInt | 
      spliterator(int[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfInt | 
      spliterator(int[] array)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        Spliterator<T> | 
      spliterator(T[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        Spliterator.OfDouble | 
      spliterator(double[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        DoubleStream | 
      stream(double[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        DoubleStream | 
      stream(double[] array)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        LongStream | 
      stream(long[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        IntStream | 
      stream(int[] array)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        LongStream | 
      stream(long[] array)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        Stream<T> | 
      stream(T[] array)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        IntStream | 
      stream(int[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        <T>
        Stream<T> | 
      stream(T[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
      Returns a sequential  | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(float[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(long[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(double[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(short[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(char[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(byte[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(int[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(Object[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| 
        
        
        static
        
        
        String | 
      toString(boolean[] a)
      Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array. | 
| Inherited methods | |
|---|---|
Public methods
asList
public static List<T> asList (T... a)
Returns a fixed-size list backed by the specified array. Changes made to
 the array will be visible in the returned list, and changes made to the
 list will be visible in the array. The returned list is
 Serializable and implements RandomAccess.
 
The returned list implements the optional Collection methods, except
 those that would change the size of the returned list. Those methods leave
 the list unchanged and throw UnsupportedOperationException.
 
If the specified array's actual component type differs from the type
 parameter T, this can result in operations on the returned list throwing an
 ArrayStoreException.
API Note:
- This method acts as bridge between array-based and collection-based
 APIs, in combination with Collection.toArray.This method provides a way to wrap an existing array: Integer[] numbers = ... ... List<Integer> values = Arrays.asList(numbers);This method also provides a convenient way to create a fixed-size list initialized to contain several elements: List<String> stooges = Arrays.asList("Larry", "Moe", "Curly");The list returned by this method is modifiable. To create an unmodifiable list, use Collections.unmodifiableListor Unmodifiable Lists.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array by which the list will be backed | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| List<T> | a list view of the specified array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified array is null | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (byte[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                byte key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of bytes for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted (as
 by the sort(byte[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | byte: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (long[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                long key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of longs for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted (as
 by the sort(long[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | long: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (short[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                short key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of shorts for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted
 (as by the sort(short[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.  If
 it is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | short: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (T[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                T key, 
                Comparator<? super T> c)Searches a range of
 the specified array for the specified object using the binary
 search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted into ascending order
 according to the specified comparator (as by the
 sort(T[], int, int, Comparator)
 method) prior to making this call.
 If it is not sorted, the results are undefined.
 If the range contains multiple elements equal to the specified object,
 there is no guarantee which one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | T: the value to be searched for | 
| c | Comparator: the comparator by which the array is ordered.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the range contains elements that are not mutually comparable using the specified comparator, or the search key is not comparable to the elements in the range using this comparator. | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (short[] a, 
                short key)Searches the specified array of shorts for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted
 (as by the sort(short[]) method) prior to making this call.  If
 it is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be searched | 
| key | short: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Object key)
Searches a range of
 the specified array for the specified object using the binary
 search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted into ascending order
 according to the
 natural ordering
 of its elements (as by the
 sort(java.lang.Object[], int, int) method) prior to making this
 call.  If it is not sorted, the results are undefined.
 (If the range contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for
 example, strings and integers), it cannot be sorted according
 to the natural ordering of its elements, hence results are undefined.)
 If the range contains multiple
 elements equal to the specified object, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | Object: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the search key is not comparable to the elements of the array within the specified range. | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (int[] a, 
                int key)Searches the specified array of ints for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted (as
 by the sort(int[]) method) prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be searched | 
| key | int: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (double[] a, 
                double key)Searches the specified array of doubles for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted
 (as by the sort(double[]) method) prior to making this call.
 If it is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.  This method considers all NaN values to be
 equivalent and equal.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be searched | 
| key | double: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (float[] a, 
                float key)Searches the specified array of floats for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm. The array must be sorted
 (as by the sort(float[]) method) prior to making this call. If
 it is not sorted, the results are undefined. If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found. This method considers all NaN values to be
 equivalent and equal.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be searched | 
| key | float: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1). The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key. Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (char[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                char key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of chars for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted (as
 by the sort(char[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | char: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (long[] a, 
                long key)Searches the specified array of longs for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted (as
 by the sort(long[]) method) prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be searched | 
| key | long: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (float[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                float key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of floats for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted
 (as by the sort(float[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call. If
 it is not sorted, the results are undefined. If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found. This method considers all NaN values to be
 equivalent and equal.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | float: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1). The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key. Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (int[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                int key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of ints for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted (as
 by the sort(int[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | int: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (byte[] a, 
                byte key)Searches the specified array of bytes for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted (as
 by the sort(byte[]) method) prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be searched | 
| key | byte: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (Object[] a, Object key)
Searches the specified array for the specified object using the binary
 search algorithm. The array must be sorted into ascending order
 according to the
 natural ordering
 of its elements (as by the
 sort(java.lang.Object[]) method) prior to making this call.
 If it is not sorted, the results are undefined.
 (If the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for
 example, strings and integers), it cannot be sorted according
 to the natural ordering of its elements, hence results are undefined.)
 If the array contains multiple
 elements equal to the specified object, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be searched | 
| key | Object: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the search key is not comparable to the elements of the array. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (double[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                double key)Searches a range of
 the specified array of doubles for the specified value using
 the binary search algorithm.
 The range must be sorted
 (as by the sort(double[], int, int) method)
 prior to making this call.
 If it is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the range contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.  This method considers all NaN values to be
 equivalent and equal.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be searched | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
          searched | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be searched | 
| key | double: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array
         within the specified range;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element in the range greater than the key,
         ortoIndexif all
         elements in the range are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0 or toIndex > a.length | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (char[] a, 
                char key)Searches the specified array of chars for the specified value using the
 binary search algorithm.  The array must be sorted (as
 by the sort(char[]) method) prior to making this call.  If it
 is not sorted, the results are undefined.  If the array contains
 multiple elements with the specified value, there is no guarantee which
 one will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be searched | 
| key | char: the value to be searched for | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
binarySearch
public static int binarySearch (T[] a, 
                T key, 
                Comparator<? super T> c)Searches the specified array for the specified object using the binary
 search algorithm.  The array must be sorted into ascending order
 according to the specified comparator (as by the
 sort(T[], Comparator)
 method) prior to making this call.  If it is
 not sorted, the results are undefined.
 If the array contains multiple
 elements equal to the specified object, there is no guarantee which one
 will be found.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be searched | 
| key | T: the value to be searched for | 
| c | Comparator: the comparator by which the array is ordered.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | index of the search key, if it is contained in the array;
         otherwise, (-(insertion point) - 1).  The
         insertion point is defined as the point at which the
         key would be inserted into the array: the index of the first
         element greater than the key, ora.lengthif all
         elements in the array are less than the specified key.  Note
         that this guarantees that the return value will be >= 0 if
         and only if the key is found. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable using the specified comparator, or the search key is not comparable to the elements of the array using this comparator. | 
compare
public static int compare (T[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                T[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Compares two Object arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing with the
 specified comparator two elements at a relative index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(java.lang.Object[], int, int, java.lang.Object[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray elements):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex, cmp); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return cmp.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | T: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array or the comparator is null | 
compare
public static int compare (byte[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                byte[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two byte arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Byte.compare(byte, byte), at a relative index
 within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(byte[], int, int, byte[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Byte.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | byte: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (char[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                char[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two char arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Character.compare(char, char), at a relative
 index within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(char[], int, int, char[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Character.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | char: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (float[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                float[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two float arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Float.compare(float, float), at a relative
 index within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(float[], int, int, float[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Float.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | float: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (float[] a, 
                float[] b)Compares two float arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Float.compare(float, float), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(float[], float[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Float.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the first array to compare | 
| b | float: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (short[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                short[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two short arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Short.compare(short, short), at a relative
 index within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(short[], int, int, short[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Short.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | short: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (T[] a, 
                T[] b, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Compares two Object arrays lexicographically using a specified
 comparator.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing with the specified comparator two
 elements at an index within the respective arrays that is the prefix
 length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(java.lang.Object[], java.lang.Object[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b, cmp); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return cmp.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to compare | 
| b | T: the second array to compare | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the comparator is null | 
compare
public static int compare (int[] a, 
                int[] b)Compares two int arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Integer.compare(int, int), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(int[], int[]) for the definition of a common and
 proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Integer.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to compare | 
| b | int: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (boolean[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                boolean[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two boolean arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Boolean.compare(boolean, boolean), at a
 relative index within the respective arrays that is the length of the
 prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(boolean[], int, int, boolean[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Boolean.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | boolean: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (boolean[] a, 
                boolean[] b)Compares two boolean arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Boolean.compare(boolean, boolean), at an index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(boolean[], boolean[]) for the definition of a
 common and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Boolean.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the first array to compare | 
| b | boolean: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (T[] a, 
                T[] b)Compares two Object arrays, within comparable elements,
 lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements of type T at
 an index i within the respective arrays that is the prefix
 length, as if by:
 
Comparator.nullsFirst(Comparator.<T>naturalOrder()).
         compare(a[i], b[i])
 mismatch(java.lang.Object[], java.lang.Object[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference. Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 A null array element is considered lexicographically less than a
 non-null array element. Two null array elements are
 considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references and elements):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return a[i].compareTo(b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to compare | 
| b | T: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (double[] a, 
                double[] b)Compares two double arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Double.compare(double, double), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(double[], double[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Double.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first array to compare | 
| b | double: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (T[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                T[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two Object arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements of type T at a relative index i within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length, as if by:
 
Comparator.nullsFirst(Comparator.<T>naturalOrder()).
         compare(a[aFromIndex + i, b[bFromIndex + i])
 mismatch(java.lang.Object[], int, int, java.lang.Object[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray elements):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return a[aFromIndex + i].compareTo(b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | T: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (long[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                long[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two long arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Long.compare(long, long), at a relative index
 within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(long[], int, int, long[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Long.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | long: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (int[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                int[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two int arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Integer.compare(int, int), at a relative index
 within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(int[], int, int, int[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Integer.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | int: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (long[] a, 
                long[] b)Compares two long arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Long.compare(long, long), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(long[], long[]) for the definition of a common and
 proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Long.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to compare | 
| b | long: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (byte[] a, 
                byte[] b)Compares two byte arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Byte.compare(byte, byte), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(byte[], byte[]) for the definition of a common and
 proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Byte.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to compare | 
| b | byte: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (double[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                double[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two double arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Double.compare(double, double), at a relative
 index within the respective arrays that is the length of the prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(double[], int, int, double[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
 
The comparison is consistent with
 equals, more
 specifically the following holds for arrays a and b with
 specified ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively:
 
Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) ==
         (Arrays.compare(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Double.compare(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | double: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compare
public static int compare (short[] a, 
                short[] b)Compares two short arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Short.compare(short, short), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(short[], short[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Short.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to compare | 
| b | short: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compare
public static int compare (char[] a, 
                char[] b)Compares two char arrays lexicographically.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Character.compare(char, char), at an index within the respective
 arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(char[], char[]) for the definition of a common and
 proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
 
The comparison is consistent with equals,
 more specifically the following holds for arrays a and b:
 
Arrays.equals(a, b) == (Arrays.compare(a, b) == 0)
 API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Character.compare(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the first array to compare | 
| b | char: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are equal and
         contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (byte[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                byte[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two byte arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges, numerically treating elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Byte.compareUnsigned(byte, byte), at a
 relative index within the respective arrays that is the length of the
 prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(byte[], int, int, byte[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Byte.compareUnsigned(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | byte: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (int[] a, 
                int[] b)Compares two int arrays lexicographically, numerically treating
 elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Integer.compareUnsigned(int, int), at an index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(int[], int[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Integer.compareUnsigned(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to compare | 
| b | int: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are
         equal and contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (short[] a, 
                short[] b)Compares two short arrays lexicographically, numerically treating
 elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Short.compareUnsigned(short, short), at an index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(short[], short[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Short.compareUnsigned(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to compare | 
| b | short: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are
         equal and contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (int[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                int[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two int arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges, numerically treating elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Integer.compareUnsigned(int, int), at a
 relative index within the respective arrays that is the length of the
 prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(int[], int, int, int[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Integer.compareUnsigned(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | int: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (short[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                short[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two short arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges, numerically treating elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Short.compareUnsigned(short, short), at a
 relative index within the respective arrays that is the length of the
 prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(short[], int, int, short[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Short.compareUnsigned(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | short: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (byte[] a, 
                byte[] b)Compares two byte arrays lexicographically, numerically treating
 elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Byte.compareUnsigned(byte, byte), at an index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(byte[], byte[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Byte.compareUnsigned(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to compare | 
| b | byte: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are
         equal and contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (long[] a, 
                long[] b)Compares two long arrays lexicographically, numerically treating
 elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing two elements, as if by
 Long.compareUnsigned(long, long), at an index within the
 respective arrays that is the prefix length.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two array lengths.
 (See mismatch(long[], long[]) for the definition of a common
 and proper prefix.)
 
A null array reference is considered lexicographically less
 than a non-null array reference.  Two null array
 references are considered equal.
API Note:
- This method behaves as if (for non- - nullarray references):- int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, b); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(a.length, b.length)) return Long.compareUnsigned(a[i], b[i]); return a.length - b.length;
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to compare | 
| b | long: the second array to compare | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if the first and second array are
         equal and contain the same elements in the same order;
         a value less than0if the first array is
         lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if the first array is
         lexicographically greater than the second array | 
compareUnsigned
public static int compareUnsigned (long[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                long[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Compares two long arrays lexicographically over the specified
 ranges, numerically treating elements as unsigned.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix
 then the lexicographic comparison is the result of comparing two
 elements, as if by Long.compareUnsigned(long, long), at a
 relative index within the respective arrays that is the length of the
 prefix.
 Otherwise, one array is a proper prefix of the other and, lexicographic
 comparison is the result of comparing the two range lengths.
 (See mismatch(long[], int, int, long[], int, int) for the
 definition of a common and proper prefix.)
API Note:
- This method behaves as if: - int i = Arrays.mismatch(a, aFromIndex, aToIndex, b, bFromIndex, bToIndex); if (i >= 0 && i < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex)) return Long.compareUnsigned(a[aFromIndex + i], b[bFromIndex + i]); return (aToIndex - aFromIndex) - (bToIndex - bFromIndex);
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to compare | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be compared | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be compared | 
| b | long: the second array to compare | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be compared | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be compared | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the value 0if, over the specified ranges, the first and
         second array are equal and contain the same elements in the same
         order;
         a value less than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically less than the second array; and
         a value greater than0if, over the specified ranges, the
         first array is lexicographically greater than the second array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
copyOf
public static float[] copyOf (float[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain 0f.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | float: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| float[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static T[] copyOf (T[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with nulls (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain null.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
 The resulting array is of exactly the same class as the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | T: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| T[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with nulls to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static char[] copyOf (char[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with null characters (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are valid
 in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will contain
 identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the copy but not
 the original, the copy will contain '\u0000'.  Such indices
 will exist if and only if the specified length is greater than that of
 the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | char: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| char[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with null characters to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static double[] copyOf (double[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain 0d.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | double: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static boolean[] copyOf (boolean[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with false (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain false.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | boolean: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with false elements to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static int[] copyOf (int[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain 0.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | int: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static long[] copyOf (long[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain 0L.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | long: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static short[] copyOf (short[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain (short)0.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | short: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| short[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOf
public static T[] copyOf (U[] original, 
                int newLength, 
                Class<? extends T[]> newType)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with nulls (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain null.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
 The resulting array is of the class newType.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | U: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| newType | Class: the class of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| T[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with nulls to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
| ArrayStoreException | if an element copied from originalis not of a runtime type that can be stored in
     an array of classnewType | 
copyOf
public static byte[] copyOf (byte[] original, 
                int newLength)Copies the specified array, truncating or padding with zeros (if necessary)
 so the copy has the specified length.  For all indices that are
 valid in both the original array and the copy, the two arrays will
 contain identical values.  For any indices that are valid in the
 copy but not the original, the copy will contain (byte)0.
 Such indices will exist if and only if the specified length
 is greater than that of the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | byte: the array to be copied | 
| newLength | int: the length of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| byte[] | a copy of the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the specified length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NegativeArraySizeException | if newLengthis negative | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static double[] copyOfRange (double[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 0d is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | double: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| double[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static float[] copyOfRange (float[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 0f is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | float: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| float[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static T[] copyOfRange (U[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to, 
                Class<? extends T[]> newType)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 null is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
 The resulting array is of the class newType.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | U: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| newType | Class: the class of the copy to be returned | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| T[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with nulls to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
| ArrayStoreException | if an element copied from originalis not of a runtime type that can be stored in
     an array of classnewType. | 
copyOfRange
public static T[] copyOfRange (T[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 null is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
 
The resulting array is of exactly the same class as the original array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | T: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| T[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with nulls to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static char[] copyOfRange (char[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 '\u0000' is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | char: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| char[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with null characters to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static long[] copyOfRange (long[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 0L is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | long: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| long[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static int[] copyOfRange (int[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 0 is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | int: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static boolean[] copyOfRange (boolean[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 false is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | boolean: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with false elements to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static short[] copyOfRange (short[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 (short)0 is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | short: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| short[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
copyOfRange
public static byte[] copyOfRange (byte[] original, 
                int from, 
                int to)Copies the specified range of the specified array into a new array.
 The initial index of the range (from) must lie between zero
 and original.length, inclusive.  The value at
 original[from] is placed into the initial element of the copy
 (unless from == original.length or from == to).
 Values from subsequent elements in the original array are placed into
 subsequent elements in the copy.  The final index of the range
 (to), which must be greater than or equal to from,
 may be greater than original.length, in which case
 (byte)0 is placed in all elements of the copy whose index is
 greater than or equal to original.length - from.  The length
 of the returned array will be to - from.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| original | byte: the array from which a range is to be copied | 
| from | int: the initial index of the range to be copied, inclusive | 
| to | int: the final index of the range to be copied, exclusive.
     (This index may lie outside the array.) | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| byte[] | a new array containing the specified range from the original array, truncated or padded with zeros to obtain the required length | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if from < 0orfrom > original.length | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if from > to | 
| NullPointerException | if originalis null | 
deepEquals
public static boolean deepEquals (Object[] a1, Object[] a2)
Returns true if the two specified arrays are deeply
 equal to one another.  Unlike the equals(java.lang.Object[], java.lang.Object[])
 method, this method is appropriate for use with nested arrays of
 arbitrary depth.
 
Two array references are considered deeply equal if both
 are null, or if they refer to arrays that contain the same
 number of elements and all corresponding pairs of elements in the two
 arrays are deeply equal.
 
Two possibly null elements e1 and e2 are
 deeply equal if any of the following conditions hold:
 
-  e1ande2are both arrays of object reference types, andArrays.deepEquals(e1, e2) would return true
-  e1ande2are arrays of the same primitive type, and the appropriate overloading ofArrays.equals(e1, e2)would return true.
-  e1 == e2
-  e1.equals(e2)would return true.
null elements at any depth.
 If either of the specified arrays contain themselves as elements either directly or indirectly through one or more levels of arrays, the behavior of this method is undefined.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a1 | Object: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | Object: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
deepHashCode
public static int deepHashCode (Object[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the "deep contents" of the specified array. If the array contains other arrays as elements, the hash code is based on their contents and so on, ad infinitum. It is therefore unacceptable to invoke this method on an array that contains itself as an element, either directly or indirectly through one or more levels of arrays. The behavior of such an invocation is undefined.
For any two arrays a and b such that
 Arrays.deepEquals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.deepHashCode(a) == Arrays.deepHashCode(b).
 
The computation of the value returned by this method is similar to
 that of the value returned by List.hashCode() on a list
 containing the same elements as a in the same order, with one
 difference: If an element e of a is itself an array,
 its hash code is computed not by calling e.hashCode(), but as
 by calling the appropriate overloading of Arrays.hashCode(e)
 if e is an array of a primitive type, or as by calling
 Arrays.deepHashCode(e) recursively if e is an array
 of a reference type.  If a is null, this method
 returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array whose deep-content-based hash code to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a deep-content-based hash code for a | 
See also:
deepToString
public static String deepToString (Object[] a)
Returns a string representation of the "deep contents" of the specified array. If the array contains other arrays as elements, the string representation contains their contents and so on. This method is designed for converting multidimensional arrays to strings.
The string representation consists of a list of the array's
 elements, enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent
 elements are separated by the characters ", " (a comma
 followed by a space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(Object), unless they are themselves
 arrays.
 
If an element e is an array of a primitive type, it is
 converted to a string as by invoking the appropriate overloading of
 Arrays.toString(e).  If an element e is an array of a
 reference type, it is converted to a string as by invoking
 this method recursively.
 
To avoid infinite recursion, if the specified array contains itself
 as an element, or contains an indirect reference to itself through one
 or more levels of arrays, the self-reference is converted to the string
 "[...]".  For example, an array containing only a reference
 to itself would be rendered as "[[...]]".
 
This method returns "null" if the specified array
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
See also:
equals
public static boolean equals (double[] a, 
                double[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of doubles are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
 Two doubles d1 and d2 are considered equal if:
 
    Double.valueOf(d1).equals(Double.valueOf(d2))== operator, this method considers
 NaN equal to itself, and 0.0d unequal to -0.0d.)
    | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | double: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
See also:
equals
public static boolean equals (long[] a, 
                long[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of longs are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | long: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (short[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                short[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of shorts, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | short: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (char[] a, 
                char[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of chars are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | char: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (float[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                float[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of floats, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
Two floats f1 and f2 are considered equal if:
 
    Float.valueOf(f1).equals(Float.valueOf(f2))== operator, this method considers
 NaN equal to itself, and 0.0f unequal to -0.0f.)
    
    | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | float: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
See also:
equals
public static boolean equals (int[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                int[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of ints, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | int: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (float[] a, 
                float[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of floats are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
 Two floats f1 and f2 are considered equal if:
 
    Float.valueOf(f1).equals(Float.valueOf(f2))== operator, this method considers
 NaN equal to itself, and 0.0f unequal to -0.0f.)
    | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | float: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
See also:
equals
public static boolean equals (short[] a, 
                short[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of shorts are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | short: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (byte[] a, 
                byte[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of bytes are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | byte: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (T[] a, 
                T[] a2, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects are
 equal to one another.
 
Two arrays are considered equal if both arrays contain the same number
 of elements, and all corresponding pairs of elements in the two arrays
 are equal.  In other words, the two arrays are equal if they contain the
 same elements in the same order.  Also, two array references are
 considered equal if both are null.
 
Two objects e1 and e2 are considered equal if,
 given the specified comparator, cmp.compare(e1, e2) == 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | T: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the comparator is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (byte[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                byte[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of bytes, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | byte: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (boolean[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                boolean[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of booleans, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | boolean: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (Object[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, Object[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
Two objects e1 and e2 are considered equal if
 Objects.equals(e1, e2).
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | Object: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (double[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                double[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of doubles, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
Two doubles d1 and d2 are considered equal if:
 
    Double.valueOf(d1).equals(Double.valueOf(d2))== operator, this method considers
 NaN equal to itself, and 0.0d unequal to -0.0d.)
    
    | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | double: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
See also:
equals
public static boolean equals (Object[] a, Object[] a2)
Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects are
 equal to one another.  The two arrays are considered equal if
 both arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding
 pairs of elements in the two arrays are equal.  Two objects e1
 and e2 are considered equal if
 Objects.equals(e1, e2).
 In other words, the two arrays are equal if
 they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also, two array
 references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | Object: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (char[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                char[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of chars, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | char: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (boolean[] a, 
                boolean[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of booleans are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | boolean: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (int[] a, 
                int[] a2)Returns true if the two specified arrays of ints are
 equal to one another.  Two arrays are considered equal if both
 arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs
 of elements in the two arrays are equal.  In other words, two arrays
 are equal if they contain the same elements in the same order.  Also,
 two array references are considered equal if both are null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: one array to be tested for equality | 
| a2 | int: the other array to be tested for equality | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays are equal | 
equals
public static boolean equals (long[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                long[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Returns true if the two specified arrays of longs, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | long: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
equals
public static boolean equals (T[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                T[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Returns true if the two specified arrays of Objects, over the specified ranges, are equal to one another.
Two arrays are considered equal if the number of elements covered by each range is the same, and all corresponding pairs of elements over the specified ranges in the two arrays are equal. In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain, over the specified ranges, the same elements in the same order.
Two objects e1 and e2 are considered equal if,
 given the specified comparator, cmp.compare(e1, e2) == 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to be tested for equality | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | T: the second array to be tested for equality | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| boolean | trueif the two arrays, over the specified ranges, are
         equal | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array or the comparator is null | 
fill
public static void fill (float[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                float val)Assigns the specified float value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of floats.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | float: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (byte[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                byte val)Assigns the specified byte value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of bytes.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | byte: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (char[] a, 
                char val)Assigns the specified char value to each element of the specified array of chars.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be filled | 
| val | char: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (boolean[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                boolean val)Assigns the specified boolean value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of booleans.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | boolean: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (Object[] a, Object val)
Assigns the specified Object reference to each element of the specified array of Objects.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be filled | 
| val | Object: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayStoreException | if the specified value is not of a runtime type that can be stored in the specified array | 
fill
public static void fill (long[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                long val)Assigns the specified long value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of longs.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | long: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex, Object val)
Assigns the specified Object reference to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of Objects.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | Object: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
| ArrayStoreException | if the specified value is not of a runtime type that can be stored in the specified array | 
fill
public static void fill (float[] a, 
                float val)Assigns the specified float value to each element of the specified array of floats.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be filled | 
| val | float: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (char[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                char val)Assigns the specified char value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of chars.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | char: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (double[] a, 
                double val)Assigns the specified double value to each element of the specified array of doubles.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be filled | 
| val | double: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (long[] a, 
                long val)Assigns the specified long value to each element of the specified array of longs.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be filled | 
| val | long: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (byte[] a, 
                byte val)Assigns the specified byte value to each element of the specified array of bytes.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be filled | 
| val | byte: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (int[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                int val)Assigns the specified int value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of ints.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | int: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (double[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                double val)Assigns the specified double value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of doubles.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | double: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (short[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                short val)Assigns the specified short value to each element of the specified
 range of the specified array of shorts.  The range to be filled
 extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be filled is empty.)
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be filled | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be
        filled with the specified value | 
| val | short: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
fill
public static void fill (boolean[] a, 
                boolean val)Assigns the specified boolean value to each element of the specified array of booleans.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the array to be filled | 
| val | boolean: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (short[] a, 
                short val)Assigns the specified short value to each element of the specified array of shorts.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be filled | 
| val | short: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
fill
public static void fill (int[] a, 
                int val)Assigns the specified int value to each element of the specified array of ints.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be filled | 
| val | int: the value to be stored in all elements of the array | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (boolean[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two boolean arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Boolean
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (int[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two non-null int arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Integer
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (short[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two short arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Short
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (double[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two double arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Double
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (byte[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two byte arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Byte
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (char[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two char arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Character
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (long[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two long arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Long
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (float[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array.
 For any two float arrays a and b
 such that Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is the same value that would be
 obtained by invoking the hashCode
 method on a List containing a sequence of Float
 instances representing the elements of a in the same order.
 If a is null, this method returns 0.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array whose hash value to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
hashCode
public static int hashCode (Object[] a)
Returns a hash code based on the contents of the specified array. If the array contains other arrays as elements, the hash code is based on their identities rather than their contents. It is therefore acceptable to invoke this method on an array that contains itself as an element, either directly or indirectly through one or more levels of arrays.
For any two arrays a and b such that
 Arrays.equals(a, b), it is also the case that
 Arrays.hashCode(a) == Arrays.hashCode(b).
 
The value returned by this method is equal to the value that would
 be returned by Arrays.asList(a).hashCode(), unless a
 is null, in which case 0 is returned.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array whose content-based hash code to compute | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | a content-based hash code for a | 
See also:
mismatch
public static int mismatch (int[] a, 
                int[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two int
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | int: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (short[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                short[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 short arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | short: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (float[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                float[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 float arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     Float.compare(a[aFromIndex + pl], b[bFromIndex + pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | float: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (boolean[] a, 
                boolean[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
 boolean arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The
 index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive)
 of the smaller array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | boolean: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (Object[] a, Object[] b)
Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
 Object arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The
 index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive)
 of the smaller array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     !Objects.equals(a[pl], b[pl])
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | Object: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (long[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                long[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 long arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | long: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (T[] a, 
                T[] b, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
 Object arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.
 The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length
 (inclusive) of the smaller array.
 
The specified comparator is used to determine if two array elements from the each array are not equal.
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl, cmp)
     cmp.compare(a[pl], b[pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   cmp)
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | T: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array or the comparator is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (boolean[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                boolean[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 boolean arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if
 no mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up
 to the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | boolean: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (T[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                T[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 Object arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if
 no mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up
 to the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl, cmp) &&
     cmp.compare(a[aFromIndex + pl], b[bFromIndex + pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   cmp)
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | T: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to compare array elements | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array or the comparator is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (double[] a, 
                double[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two
 double arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The
 index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive)
 of the smaller array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     Double.compare(a[pl], b[pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | double: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (char[] a, 
                char[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two char
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | char: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (int[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                int[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 int arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | int: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (byte[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                byte[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 byte arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | byte: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (short[] a, 
                short[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two short
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | short: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (double[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                double[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 double arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if
 no mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up
 to the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     Double.compare(a[aFromIndex + pl], b[bFromIndex + pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | double: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (float[] a, 
                float[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two float
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     Float.compare(a[pl], b[pl]) != 0
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | float: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (long[] a, 
                long[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two long
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | long: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (byte[] a, 
                byte[] b)Finds and returns the index of the first mismatch between two byte
 arrays, otherwise return -1 if no mismatch is found.  The index will be
 in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to the length (inclusive) of the smaller
 array.
 
If the two arrays share a common prefix then the returned index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other then the returned index is the length of the smaller array and it follows that the index is only valid for the larger array. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(a.length, b.length) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, pl, b, 0, pl) &&
     a[pl] != b[pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
a.length != b.length &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length),
                   b, 0, Math.min(a.length, b.length))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| b | byte: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the index of the first mismatch between the two arrays,
         otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (Object[] a, int aFromIndex, int aToIndex, Object[] b, int bFromIndex, int bToIndex)
Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 Object arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if
 no mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up
 to the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     !Objects.equals(a[aFromIndex + pl], b[bFromIndex + pl])
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | Object: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
mismatch
public static int mismatch (char[] a, 
                int aFromIndex, 
                int aToIndex, 
                char[] b, 
                int bFromIndex, 
                int bToIndex)Finds and returns the relative index of the first mismatch between two
 char arrays over the specified ranges, otherwise return -1 if no
 mismatch is found.  The index will be in the range of 0 (inclusive) up to
 the length (inclusive) of the smaller range.
 
If the two arrays, over the specified ranges, share a common prefix then the returned relative index is the length of the common prefix and it follows that there is a mismatch between the two elements at that relative index within the respective arrays. If one array is a proper prefix of the other, over the specified ranges, then the returned relative index is the length of the smaller range and it follows that the relative index is only valid for the array with the larger range. Otherwise, there is no mismatch.
Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a common
 prefix of length pl if the following expression is true:
 
pl >= 0 &&
     pl < Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, aFromIndex, aFromIndex + pl, b, bFromIndex, bFromIndex + pl) &&
     a[aFromIndex + pl] != b[bFromIndex + pl]
 0 indicates that the first
 elements from each array mismatch.
 Two non-null arrays, a and b with specified
 ranges [aFromIndex, aToIndex) and
 [bFromIndex, bToIndex) respectively, share a proper
 prefix if the following expression is true:
 
(aToIndex - aFromIndex) != (bToIndex - bFromIndex) &&
     Arrays.equals(a, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex),
                   b, 0, Math.min(aToIndex - aFromIndex, bToIndex - bFromIndex))
 | Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the first array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| aFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   first array to be tested | 
| aToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 first array to be tested | 
| b | char: the second array to be tested for a mismatch | 
| bFromIndex | int: the index (inclusive) of the first element in the
                   second array to be tested | 
| bToIndex | int: the index (exclusive) of the last element in the
                 second array to be tested | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| int | the relative index of the first mismatch between the two arrays
         over the specified ranges, otherwise -1. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if aFromIndex > aToIndexor
         ifbFromIndex > bToIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if aFromIndex < 0 or aToIndex > a.lengthor
         ifbFromIndex < 0 or bToIndex > b.length | 
| NullPointerException | if either array is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (long[] array, 
                LongBinaryOperator op)Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place,
 using the supplied function. For example if the array initially
 holds [2, 1, 0, 3] and the operation performs addition,
 then upon return the array holds [2, 3, 3, 6].
 Parallel prefix computation is usually more efficient than
 sequential loops for large arrays.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array, which is modified in-place by this method | 
| op | LongBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (long[] array, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                LongBinaryOperator op)Performs parallelPrefix(long[], java.util.function.LongBinaryOperator)
 for the given subrange of the array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive | 
| op | LongBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > array.length | 
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (double[] array, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                DoubleBinaryOperator op)Performs parallelPrefix(double[], java.util.function.DoubleBinaryOperator)
 for the given subrange of the array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive | 
| op | DoubleBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > array.length | 
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (double[] array, 
                DoubleBinaryOperator op)Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place,
 using the supplied function. For example if the array initially
 holds [2.0, 1.0, 0.0, 3.0] and the operation performs addition,
 then upon return the array holds [2.0, 3.0, 3.0, 6.0].
 Parallel prefix computation is usually more efficient than
 sequential loops for large arrays.
 
Because floating-point operations may not be strictly associative, the returned result may not be identical to the value that would be obtained if the operation was performed sequentially.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array, which is modified in-place by this method | 
| op | DoubleBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free function to perform the cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (T[] array, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                BinaryOperator<T> op)Performs parallelPrefix(java.lang.Object[], java.util.function.BinaryOperator)
 for the given subrange of the array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: the array | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive | 
| op | BinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > array.length | 
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (T[] array, 
                BinaryOperator<T> op)Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place,
 using the supplied function. For example if the array initially
 holds [2, 1, 0, 3] and the operation performs addition,
 then upon return the array holds [2, 3, 3, 6].
 Parallel prefix computation is usually more efficient than
 sequential loops for large arrays.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: the array, which is modified in-place by this method | 
| op | BinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (int[] array, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                IntBinaryOperator op)Performs parallelPrefix(int[], java.util.function.IntBinaryOperator)
 for the given subrange of the array.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive | 
| op | IntBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > array.length | 
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelPrefix
public static void parallelPrefix (int[] array, 
                IntBinaryOperator op)Cumulates, in parallel, each element of the given array in place,
 using the supplied function. For example if the array initially
 holds [2, 1, 0, 3] and the operation performs addition,
 then upon return the array holds [2, 3, 3, 6].
 Parallel prefix computation is usually more efficient than
 sequential loops for large arrays.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array, which is modified in-place by this method | 
| op | IntBinaryOperator: a side-effect-free, associative function to perform the
 cumulation | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the specified array or function is null | 
parallelSetAll
public static void parallelSetAll (double[] array, 
                IntToDoubleFunction generator)Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, an unchecked exception
 is thrown from parallelSetAll and the array is left in an
 indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, in parallel, using a generator function
 to compute each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .parallel() .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsDouble(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntToDoubleFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
parallelSetAll
public static void parallelSetAll (int[] array, 
                IntUnaryOperator generator)Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, an unchecked exception
 is thrown from parallelSetAll and the array is left in an
 indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, in parallel, using a generator function
 to compute each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .parallel() .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsInt(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntUnaryOperator: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
 value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
parallelSetAll
public static void parallelSetAll (long[] array, 
                IntToLongFunction generator)Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, an unchecked exception
 is thrown from parallelSetAll and the array is left in an
 indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, in parallel, using a generator function
 to compute each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .parallel() .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsLong(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntToLongFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
parallelSetAll
public static void parallelSetAll (T[] array, 
                IntFunction<? extends T> generator)Set all elements of the specified array, in parallel, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, an unchecked exception
 is thrown from parallelSetAll and the array is left in an
 indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, in parallel, using a generator function
 to compute each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .parallel() .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.apply(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (T[] a, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Sorts the specified array of objects according to the order induced by
 the specified comparator.  All elements in the array must be
 mutually comparable by the specified comparator (that is,
 c.compare(e1, e2) must not throw a ClassCastException
 for any elements e1 and e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a parallel sort-merge that breaks the
 array into sub-arrays that are themselves sorted and then merged. When
 the sub-array length reaches a minimum granularity, the sub-array is
 sorted using the appropriate Arrays.sortmethod. If the length of the specified array is less than the minimum granularity, then it is sorted using the appropriateArrays.sortmethod. The algorithm requires a working space no greater than the size of the original array. TheForkJoin common poolis used to execute any parallel tasks.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to determine the order of the array.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable using the specified comparator | 
| IllegalArgumentException | (optional) if the comparator is
         found to violate the Comparatorcontract | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (long[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (short[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (double[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
The < relation does not provide a total order on all double
 values: -0.0d == 0.0d is true and a Double.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Double.compareTo: -0.0d is treated as less than value
 0.0d and Double.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Double.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (char[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (float[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
The < relation does not provide a total order on all float
 values: -0.0f == 0.0f is true and a Float.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Float.compareTo: -0.0f is treated as less than value
 0.0f and Float.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Float.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (byte[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (int[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be sorted | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (float[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
 
The < relation does not provide a total order on all float
 values: -0.0f == 0.0f is true and a Float.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Float.compareTo: -0.0f is treated as less than value
 0.0f and Float.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Float.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (byte[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (short[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (double[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
 
The < relation does not provide a total order on all double
 values: -0.0d == 0.0d is true and a Double.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Double.compareTo: -0.0d is treated as less than value
 0.0d and Double.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Double.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (T[] a)
Sorts the specified array of objects into ascending order, according
 to the natural ordering of its elements.
 All elements in the array must implement the Comparable
 interface.  Furthermore, all elements in the array must be
 mutually comparable (that is, e1.compareTo(e2) must
 not throw a ClassCastException for any elements e1
 and e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a parallel sort-merge that breaks the
 array into sub-arrays that are themselves sorted and then merged. When
 the sub-array length reaches a minimum granularity, the sub-array is
 sorted using the appropriate Arrays.sortmethod. If the length of the specified array is less than the minimum granularity, then it is sorted using the appropriateArrays.sortmethod. The algorithm requires a working space no greater than the size of the original array. TheForkJoin common poolis used to execute any parallel tasks.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for example, strings and integers) | 
| IllegalArgumentException | (optional) if the natural
         ordering of the array elements is found to violate the Comparablecontract | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (char[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (long[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (int[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending numerical order.
 The range to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex,
 inclusive, to the index toIndex, exclusive. If
 fromIndex == toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley and Josh Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (T[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects into
 ascending order, according to the
 natural ordering of its
 elements.  The range to be sorted extends from index
 fromIndex, inclusive, to index toIndex, exclusive.
 (If fromIndex==toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.)  All
 elements in this range must implement the Comparable
 interface.  Furthermore, all elements in this range must be mutually
 comparable (that is, e1.compareTo(e2) must not throw a
 ClassCastException for any elements e1 and
 e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a parallel sort-merge that breaks the
 array into sub-arrays that are themselves sorted and then merged. When
 the sub-array length reaches a minimum granularity, the sub-array is
 sorted using the appropriate Arrays.sortmethod. If the length of the specified array is less than the minimum granularity, then it is sorted using the appropriateArrays.sortmethod. The algorithm requires a working space no greater than the size of the specified range of the original array. TheForkJoin common poolis used to execute any parallel tasks.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndexor
         (optional) if the natural ordering of the array elements is
         found to violate theComparablecontract | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for example, strings and integers). | 
parallelSort
public static void parallelSort (T[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                Comparator<? super T> cmp)Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects according
 to the order induced by the specified comparator.  The range to be
 sorted extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be sorted is empty.)  All elements in the range must be
 mutually comparable by the specified comparator (that is,
 c.compare(e1, e2) must not throw a ClassCastException
 for any elements e1 and e2 in the range).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a parallel sort-merge that breaks the
 array into sub-arrays that are themselves sorted and then merged. When
 the sub-array length reaches a minimum granularity, the sub-array is
 sorted using the appropriate Arrays.sortmethod. If the length of the specified array is less than the minimum granularity, then it is sorted using the appropriateArrays.sortmethod. The algorithm requires a working space no greater than the size of the specified range of the original array. TheForkJoin common poolis used to execute any parallel tasks.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be sorted | 
| cmp | Comparator: the comparator to determine the order of the array.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndexor
         (optional) if the natural ordering of the array elements is
         found to violate theComparablecontract | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for example, strings and integers). | 
setAll
public static void setAll (long[] array, 
                IntToLongFunction generator)Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, it is relayed to the caller and the array is left in an indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, using a generator function to compute
 each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsLong(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntToLongFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
setAll
public static void setAll (int[] array, 
                IntUnaryOperator generator)Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, it is relayed to the caller and the array is left in an indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, using a generator function to compute
 each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsInt(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntUnaryOperator: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
setAll
public static void setAll (T[] array, 
                IntFunction<? extends T> generator)Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, it is relayed to the caller and the array is left in an indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, using a generator function to compute
 each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.apply(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
setAll
public static void setAll (double[] array, 
                IntToDoubleFunction generator)Set all elements of the specified array, using the provided generator function to compute each element.
If the generator function throws an exception, it is relayed to the caller and the array is left in an indeterminate state.
API Note:
- Setting a subrange of an array, using a generator function to compute
 each element, can be written as follows:
 IntStream.range(startInclusive, endExclusive) .forEach(i -> array[i] = generator.applyAsDouble(i));
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: array to be initialized | 
| generator | IntToDoubleFunction: a function accepting an index and producing the desired
        value for that position | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| NullPointerException | if the generator is null | 
sort
public static void sort (T[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex, 
                Comparator<? super T> c)Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects according
 to the order induced by the specified comparator.  The range to be
 sorted extends from index fromIndex, inclusive, to index
 toIndex, exclusive.  (If fromIndex==toIndex, the
 range to be sorted is empty.)  All elements in the range must be
 mutually comparable by the specified comparator (that is,
 c.compare(e1, e2) must not throw a ClassCastException
 for any elements e1 and e2 in the range).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation note: This implementation is a stable, adaptive, iterative mergesort that requires far fewer than n lg(n) comparisons when the input array is partially sorted, while offering the performance of a traditional mergesort when the input array is randomly ordered. If the input array is nearly sorted, the implementation requires approximately n comparisons. Temporary storage requirements vary from a small constant for nearly sorted input arrays to n/2 object references for randomly ordered input arrays.
The implementation takes equal advantage of ascending and descending order in its input array, and can take advantage of ascending and descending order in different parts of the same input array. It is well-suited to merging two or more sorted arrays: simply concatenate the arrays and sort the resulting array.
The implementation was adapted from Tim Peters's list sort for Python ( TimSort). It uses techniques from Peter McIlroy's "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity", in Proceedings of the Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, pp 467-474, January 1993.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be sorted | 
| c | Comparator: the comparator to determine the order of the array.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable using the specified comparator. | 
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndexor
         (optional) if the comparator is found to violate theComparatorcontract | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (long[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (float[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
 
The < relation does not provide a total order on all float
 values: -0.0f == 0.0f is true and a Float.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Float.compareTo: -0.0f is treated as less than value
 0.0f and Float.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Float.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (T[] a, 
                Comparator<? super T> c)Sorts the specified array of objects according to the order induced by
 the specified comparator.  All elements in the array must be
 mutually comparable by the specified comparator (that is,
 c.compare(e1, e2) must not throw a ClassCastException
 for any elements e1 and e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation note: This implementation is a stable, adaptive, iterative mergesort that requires far fewer than n lg(n) comparisons when the input array is partially sorted, while offering the performance of a traditional mergesort when the input array is randomly ordered. If the input array is nearly sorted, the implementation requires approximately n comparisons. Temporary storage requirements vary from a small constant for nearly sorted input arrays to n/2 object references for randomly ordered input arrays.
The implementation takes equal advantage of ascending and descending order in its input array, and can take advantage of ascending and descending order in different parts of the same input array. It is well-suited to merging two or more sorted arrays: simply concatenate the arrays and sort the resulting array.
The implementation was adapted from Tim Peters's list sort for Python ( TimSort). It uses techniques from Peter McIlroy's "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity", in Proceedings of the Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, pp 467-474, January 1993.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | T: the array to be sorted | 
| c | Comparator: the comparator to determine the order of the array.  Anullvalue indicates that the elements'
        natural ordering should be used. | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable using the specified comparator | 
| IllegalArgumentException | (optional) if the comparator is
         found to violate the Comparatorcontract | 
sort
public static void sort (char[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (double[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
 
The < relation does not provide a total order on all double
 values: -0.0d == 0.0d is true and a Double.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Double.compareTo: -0.0d is treated as less than value
 0.0d and Double.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Double.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (int[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (long[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (double[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
The < relation does not provide a total order on all double
 values: -0.0d == 0.0d is true and a Double.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Double.compareTo: -0.0d is treated as less than value
 0.0d and Double.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Double.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (short[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (char[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (short[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (byte[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be sorted | 
sort
public static void sort (Object[] a, int fromIndex, int toIndex)
Sorts the specified range of the specified array of objects into
 ascending order, according to the
 natural ordering of its
 elements.  The range to be sorted extends from index
 fromIndex, inclusive, to index toIndex, exclusive.
 (If fromIndex==toIndex, the range to be sorted is empty.)  All
 elements in this range must implement the Comparable
 interface.  Furthermore, all elements in this range must be mutually
 comparable (that is, e1.compareTo(e2) must not throw a
 ClassCastException for any elements e1 and
 e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation note: This implementation is a stable, adaptive, iterative mergesort that requires far fewer than n lg(n) comparisons when the input array is partially sorted, while offering the performance of a traditional mergesort when the input array is randomly ordered. If the input array is nearly sorted, the implementation requires approximately n comparisons. Temporary storage requirements vary from a small constant for nearly sorted input arrays to n/2 object references for randomly ordered input arrays.
The implementation takes equal advantage of ascending and descending order in its input array, and can take advantage of ascending and descending order in different parts of the same input array. It is well-suited to merging two or more sorted arrays: simply concatenate the arrays and sort the resulting array.
The implementation was adapted from Tim Peters's list sort for Python ( TimSort). It uses techniques from Peter McIlroy's "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity", in Proceedings of the Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, pp 467-474, January 1993.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element (inclusive) to be
        sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element (exclusive) to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndexor
         (optional) if the natural ordering of the array elements is
         found to violate theComparablecontract | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for example, strings and integers). | 
sort
public static void sort (Object[] a)
Sorts the specified array of objects into ascending order, according
 to the natural ordering of its elements.
 All elements in the array must implement the Comparable
 interface.  Furthermore, all elements in the array must be
 mutually comparable (that is, e1.compareTo(e2) must
 not throw a ClassCastException for any elements e1
 and e2 in the array).
 
This sort is guaranteed to be stable: equal elements will not be reordered as a result of the sort.
Implementation note: This implementation is a stable, adaptive, iterative mergesort that requires far fewer than n lg(n) comparisons when the input array is partially sorted, while offering the performance of a traditional mergesort when the input array is randomly ordered. If the input array is nearly sorted, the implementation requires approximately n comparisons. Temporary storage requirements vary from a small constant for nearly sorted input arrays to n/2 object references for randomly ordered input arrays.
The implementation takes equal advantage of ascending and descending order in its input array, and can take advantage of ascending and descending order in different parts of the same input array. It is well-suited to merging two or more sorted arrays: simply concatenate the arrays and sort the resulting array.
The implementation was adapted from Tim Peters's list sort for Python ( TimSort). It uses techniques from Peter McIlroy's "Optimistic Sorting and Information Theoretic Complexity", in Proceedings of the Fourth Annual ACM-SIAM Symposium on Discrete Algorithms, pp 467-474, January 1993.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ClassCastException | if the array contains elements that are not mutually comparable (for example, strings and integers) | 
| IllegalArgumentException | (optional) if the natural
         ordering of the array elements is found to violate the Comparablecontract | 
sort
public static void sort (int[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (byte[] a, 
                int fromIndex, 
                int toIndex)Sorts the specified range of the array into ascending order. The range
 to be sorted extends from the index fromIndex, inclusive, to
 the index toIndex, exclusive. If fromIndex == toIndex,
 the range to be sorted is empty.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array to be sorted | 
| fromIndex | int: the index of the first element, inclusive, to be sorted | 
| toIndex | int: the index of the last element, exclusive, to be sorted | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IllegalArgumentException | if fromIndex > toIndex | 
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if fromIndex < 0ortoIndex > a.length | 
sort
public static void sort (float[] a)
Sorts the specified array into ascending numerical order.
The < relation does not provide a total order on all float
 values: -0.0f == 0.0f is true and a Float.NaN
 value compares neither less than, greater than, nor equal to any value,
 even itself. This method uses the total order imposed by the method
 Float.compareTo: -0.0f is treated as less than value
 0.0f and Float.NaN is considered greater than any
 other value and all Float.NaN values are considered equal.
Implementation Note:
- The sorting algorithm is a Dual-Pivot Quicksort by Vladimir Yaroslavskiy, Jon Bentley, and Joshua Bloch. This algorithm offers O(n log(n)) performance on all data sets, and is typically faster than traditional (one-pivot) Quicksort implementations.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array to be sorted | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfLong spliterator (long[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a Spliterator.OfLong covering the specified range of the
 specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfLong | a spliterator for the array elements | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfLong spliterator (long[] array)
Returns a Spliterator.OfLong covering all of the specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfLong | the spliterator for the array elements | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator<T> spliterator (T[] array)
Returns a Spliterator covering all of the specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator<T> | a spliterator for the array elements | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfDouble spliterator (double[] array)
Returns a Spliterator.OfDouble covering all of the specified
 array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfDouble | a spliterator for the array elements | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfInt spliterator (int[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a Spliterator.OfInt covering the specified range of the
 specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfInt | a spliterator for the array elements | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfInt spliterator (int[] array)
Returns a Spliterator.OfInt covering all of the specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfInt | a spliterator for the array elements | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator<T> spliterator (T[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a Spliterator covering the specified range of the
 specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator<T> | a spliterator for the array elements | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
spliterator
public static Spliterator.OfDouble spliterator (double[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a Spliterator.OfDouble covering the specified range of
 the specified array.
 
The spliterator reports Spliterator.SIZED,
 Spliterator.SUBSIZED, Spliterator.ORDERED, and
 Spliterator.IMMUTABLE.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Spliterator.OfDouble | a spliterator for the array elements | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
stream
public static DoubleStream stream (double[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a sequential DoubleStream with the specified range of the
 specified array as its source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| DoubleStream | a DoubleStreamfor the array range | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
stream
public static DoubleStream stream (double[] array)
Returns a sequential DoubleStream with the specified array as its
 source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | double: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| DoubleStream | a DoubleStreamfor the array | 
stream
public static LongStream stream (long[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a sequential LongStream with the specified range of the
 specified array as its source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| LongStream | a LongStreamfor the array range | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
stream
public static IntStream stream (int[] array)
Returns a sequential IntStream with the specified array as its
 source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| IntStream | an IntStreamfor the array | 
stream
public static LongStream stream (long[] array)
Returns a sequential LongStream with the specified array as its
 source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | long: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| LongStream | a LongStreamfor the array | 
stream
public static Stream<T> stream (T[] array)
Returns a sequential Stream with the specified array as its
 source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: The array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Stream<T> | a Streamfor the array | 
stream
public static IntStream stream (int[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a sequential IntStream with the specified range of the
 specified array as its source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | int: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| IntStream | an IntStreamfor the array range | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
stream
public static Stream<T> stream (T[] array, int startInclusive, int endExclusive)
Returns a sequential Stream with the specified range of the
 specified array as its source.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| array | T: the array, assumed to be unmodified during use | 
| startInclusive | int: the first index to cover, inclusive | 
| endExclusive | int: index immediately past the last index to cover | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| Stream<T> | a Streamfor the array range | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException | if startInclusiveis
         negative,endExclusiveis less thanstartInclusive, orendExclusiveis greater than
         the array size | 
toString
public static String toString (float[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(float).  Returns "null" if a
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | float: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (long[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(long).  Returns "null" if a
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | long: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (double[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(double).  Returns "null" if a
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | double: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (short[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(short).  Returns "null" if a
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | short: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (char[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(char).  Returns "null" if a
 is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | char: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (byte[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements
 are separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed
 by a space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(byte).  Returns "null" if
 a is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | byte: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (int[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(int).  Returns "null" if a is
 null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | int: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
toString
public static String toString (Object[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 If the array contains other arrays as elements, they are converted to
 strings by the Object.toString method inherited from
 Object, which describes their identities rather than
 their contents.
 
The value returned by this method is equal to the value that would
 be returned by Arrays.asList(a).toString(), unless a
 is null, in which case "null" is returned.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | Object: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
See also:
toString
public static String toString (boolean[] a)
Returns a string representation of the contents of the specified array.
 The string representation consists of a list of the array's elements,
 enclosed in square brackets ("[]").  Adjacent elements are
 separated by the characters ", " (a comma followed by a
 space).  Elements are converted to strings as by
 String.valueOf(boolean).  Returns "null" if
 a is null.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| a | boolean: the array whose string representation to return | 
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | a string representation of a | 
