Why Lambdas are good for you:
- Form the basis of functional programming language
- Make parallel programming easier
- Write more compact code
- Richer data structure collections
- Develop cleaner APIs
- Convert the lambda expression to a function.
- Call the general function
Streams have two types of operations: intermediate and terminal.
Intermediate operation: specifies tasks to perform on the stream's elements and always results in a new stream.
filter: Result in a stream containing only the elements that satisfy a condition.
distinct: Result in a stream containing only the unique element.
limit: Result in a stream with the specified number of elements from the beginning of the original stream.
map: Result in a stream in which each element of the original stream is mapped to a new value (possibly of a different type).
sorted: Result in a stream in which the elements are in sorted order. The new stream has the same number of elements as the original stream.
Terminal operations initiates processing of a stream pipeline's intermediate operations and produces results.
forEach: Performs processing on every element in a stream.
average: Calculates the average of the elements in a numeric stream.
count: Returns the number of elements in the stream.
max: Locates the largest value in a numeric stream.
min: Locates the smallest value in a numeric stream.
reduce: Reduces the element of a collection to a single value using an associative accumulation function (e.g. a lambda that adds two elements -- in Scala this is the "map" operator).
Mutable reduction operations: creates a container (such as a collection or StringBuilder)
collect: Creates a new collection of elements containing the results of the streams's prior operations.
toArray: Creates an array containing the results of the stream's prior operations.
Search operations
findFirst: Find the first stream element based on the prior intermediate operations; immediately terminates the processing of the stream pipeline once such an element is found.
findAny: Finds any stream element based on the prior intermediate operations: immediately processing of the stream pipeline once such an element is found.
anyMatch: Determines whether any stream elements match a specified conditions; immediately terminates processing of the stream pipeline if an element matches.
allMatch: Determines whether all of the elements in the stream match a specified condition.
Examples:
Refactor:
This has done so many different changes to some of my code. Here are some example of before and after: Before: I wanted to printout some of the results and so I leveraged Spring's CommandLineRunner.Here's the after code: Another example fetching a collection of records from a database: I can refactored it doing this:
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