gs-collections


Source link: https://github.com/goldmansachs/gs-collections

GS Collections is now Eclipse Collections

We are pleased to announce that GS Collections has been migrated to the Eclipse Foundation, re-branded as Eclipse Collections.

Eclipse Collections 7.0 has the exact same feature set as GS Collections 7.0.

Going forward, any new features will be developed in Eclipse Collections. We will only port critical bug fixes to GS Collections. To support smooth migration for users, we implemented a conversion application gsc-ec-converter. Please plan your migration accordingly from GS Collections to Eclipse Collections.

GS Collections

GS Collections is a collections framework for Java. It has JDK-compatible List, Set and Map implementations with a rich API and set of utility classes that work with any JDK compatible Collections, Arrays, Maps or Strings. The iteration protocol was inspired by the Smalltalk collection framework. The library modules in GS Collections are compatible with Java 5 (gs-collections-api, gs-collections, and gs-collections-testutils).

Quick Example

GS Collections puts iteration methods on the container types. Lambdas are simulated using anonymous inner classes. Here's a code example that demonstrates the usual style of programming with GS Collections.

MutableList<Person> people = FastList.newListWith(person1, person2, person3);
 MutableList<String> sortedLastNames = people.collect(Person.TO_LAST_NAME).sortThis();
 System.out.println("Comma separated, sorted last names: " + sortedLastNames.makeString());

Person.TO_LAST_NAME is defined as a constant Function in the Person class.

public static final Function<Person, String> TO_LAST_NAME = new Function<Person, String>() {

  public String valueOf(Person person)
  {

return person.lastName;
  
}
 
}
; 

In Java 8, the Function can be replaced with a lambda:

MutableList<String> sortedLastNames = people.collect(person -> person.getLastName()).sortThis();

Or, a method reference:

MutableList<String> sortedLastNames = people.collect(Person::getLastName).sortThis();

Why GS Collections?

  • Improves readability and reduces duplication of iteration code (enforces DRY/OAOO)
  • Implements several, high-level iteration patterns (select, reject, collect, inject into, etc.) on "humane" container interfaces which are extensions of the JDK interfaces
  • Provides a consistent mechanism for iterating over Collections, Arrays, Maps, and Strings
  • Provides replacements for ArrayList, HashSet, and HashMap optimized for performance and memory usage
  • Performs more "behind-the-scene" optimizations in utility classes
  • Encapsulates a lot of the structural complexity of parallel iteration and lazy evaluation
  • Adds new containers including Bag, Interval, Multimap, BiMap, and immutable versions of all types
  • Has been under active development since 2005 and is a mature library

Documentation

The best way to learn about GS Collections is to dive into the code kata. The kata is a fun way to learn idiomatic GS Collections usage and hone your skills through practice. Please refer to the wiki for more details.

For more comprehensive documentation, take a look at the Reference Guide.

Contributions

We currently do all development in an internal Subversion repository and are not prepared to take external contributions. However, we watch the issue tracker for bug reports and feature requests.

FAQ

Why is Goldman Sachs open-sourcing GS Collections?

  • We believe that GS Collections offers a significant advantage over existing solutions. We hope others will benefit from it.
  • We believe in the power of the technical community to help improve GS Collections.
  • Technology is a huge part of what we do at Goldman Sachs. GS Collections exemplifies our commitment to technology.
  • We use open source software in many of our operations. We have benefited from the work of others and we'd like to give something back.

Does Goldman Sachs use GS Collections?

Yes, we use GS Collections in many of our internal applications.

Acquiring GS Collections

Download

Maven

<dependency>
<groupId>com.goldmansachs</groupId>
<artifactId>gs-collections-api</artifactId>
<version>7.0.0</version> </dependency>  <dependency>
<groupId>com.goldmansachs</groupId>
<artifactId>gs-collections</artifactId>
<version>7.0.0</version> </dependency>  <dependency>
<groupId>com.goldmansachs</groupId>
<artifactId>gs-collections-testutils</artifactId>
<version>7.0.0</version>
<scope>test</scope> </dependency>  <dependency>
<groupId>com.goldmansachs</groupId>
<artifactId>gs-collections-forkjoin</artifactId>
<version>7.0.0</version> </dependency>

Gradle

compile 'com.goldmansachs:gs-collections-api:7.0.0' compile 'com.goldmansachs:gs-collections:7.0.0' testCompile 'com.goldmansachs:gs-collections-testutils:7.0.0' compile 'com.goldmansachs:gs-collections-forkjoin:7.0.0'

Ivy

<dependency org="com.goldmansachs" name="gs-collections-api" rev="7.0.0" /> <dependency org="com.goldmansachs" name="gs-collections" rev="7.0.0" /> <dependency org="com.goldmansachs" name="gs-collections-testutils" rev="7.0.0" /> <dependency org="com.goldmansachs" name="gs-collections-forkjoin" rev="7.0.0"/>

Resources

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ADP

Android Distribution Platform (ADP) is a fullstack framework for storing, distributing and installing versionized apk files based (mostly for internal team or roll-back purposes) on each CI git commit.

Twine is a command line tool for managing your strings and their translations. These strings are all stored in a master text file and then Twine uses this file to import and export strings in a variety of file types, including iOS and Mac OS X .strings files, Android .xml files, gettext .po files, and [jquery-localize][jquerylocalize] .json files.

This allows individuals and companies to easily share strings across multiple projects, as well as export strings in any format the user wants.

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