On Wed, 18 Nov 2020 22:20:26 GMT, Stuart Marks <sma...@openjdk.org> wrote:

>> This change introduces a new terminal operation on Stream. This looks like a 
>> convenience method for Stream.collect(Collectors.toList()) or 
>> Stream.collect(Collectors.toUnmodifiableList()), but it's not. Having this 
>> method directly on Stream enables it to do what can't easily by done by a 
>> Collector. In particular, it allows the stream to deposit results directly 
>> into a destination array (even in parallel) and have this array be wrapped 
>> in an unmodifiable List without copying.
>> 
>> In the past we've kept most things from the Collections Framework as 
>> implementations of Collector, not directly on Stream, whereas only 
>> fundamental things (like toArray) appear directly on Stream. This is true of 
>> most Collections, but it does seem that List is special. It can be a thin 
>> wrapper around an array; it can handle generics better than arrays; and 
>> unlike an array, it can be made unmodifiable (shallowly immutable); and it 
>> can be value-based. See John Rose's comments in the bug report:
>> 
>> https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8180352?focusedCommentId=14133065&page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#comment-14133065
>> 
>> This operation is null-tolerant, which matches the rest of Streams. This 
>> isn't specified, though; a general statement about null handling in Streams 
>> is probably warranted at some point.
>> 
>> Finally, this method is indeed quite convenient (if the caller can deal with 
>> what this operation returns), as collecting into a List is the most common 
>> stream terminal operation.
>
> Stuart Marks has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional 
> commit since the last revision:
> 
>   Adjust List.copyOf to null-check and copy allowNulls lists.
>   Fix equals, hashCode, indexOf, lastIndexOf to handle nulls properly.
>   Add MOAT tests for new lists; add equals and hashCode tests.

src/java.base/share/classes/java/util/ImmutableCollections.java line 222:

> 220:             default:
> 221:                 return (List<E>) new ListN<>(input, false);
> 222:         }

Using a switch expression + arrow (->) here will allow you too factor the cast, 
even if it disappear in the generated bytecode, I think it makes the code more 
readable

-------------

PR: https://git.openjdk.java.net/jdk/pull/1026

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