Tuesday, May 15, 2012

ArratList and LinkedList

based on underline structure and which interfaces it is implementing we can understand which one to use , in which requirement



public class ArrayList<E>
extends AbstractList<E>
implements List<E>, RandomAccess, Cloneable, Serializable

means here Random access is very quick , if u want to access the elements rather than inserting or deleting then go with ArrayList

public class LinkedList<E>
extends AbstractSequentialList<E>
implements List<E>, Queue<E>, Cloneable, Serializable

here Inserting and deleting at the begining or ending is very gud, so better to go LinkedList , if ur requriement is like that 


We can ignore Cloneable and Serializable as all of the JCF implement those. It’s also quite obvious that both of them implement the List interface, as they need to provide list functionability (backwards iteration, sub listing, etc).
Now for the differences: ArrayList is implementing RandomAccess while LinkedList implementing Queue. You could already tell something about the usage of the two classes.

ArrayList

Now for some implementation notes. The ArrayList is actually encapsulating an actualy Array, an Object[]. When you instanciate ArrayList, an array is created, and when you add values into it, the array changes its size accordingly. This gives you strengths and weaknesses:
  • Fast Random Access
  • You can perform random access without fearing for performence. Calling get(int) will just access the underlying array.
  • Adding values might be slow When you don’t know the amount of values the array will contain when you create it, a lot of shifting is going to be done in the memory space when the ArrayList manipulates its internal array.
  • Slow manipulation When you’ll want to add a value randomly inside the array, between two already existing values, the array will have to start moving all the values one spot to the right in order to let that happen.

LinkedList

The LinkedList is implemented using nodes linked to each other. Each node contains aprevious node link, next node link, and value, which contains the actual data. When new data is inserted, a node is inserted and the links of the surrounding nodes are updated accordingly. When one is removed, the same happens – The surrounding nodes are changing their links and the deleted node is garbage collected. This, as well, gives strengths and weaknesses:
  • Fast manipulation As you’d expect, adding and removing new data anywhere in the list is instantanious. Change two links, and you have a new value anywhere you want it.
  • No random access Even though the get(int) is still there, it now just iterates the list until it reaches the index you specified. It has some optimizations in order to do that, but that’s basically it.

Some Conclusions

ArrayList is very useful when a well defined set of data is needed in a List interface as opposed to an array. It can be dynamically changed, but try not to do so frequently throughout the life of the application. LinkedList is there for you to do just that:Manipulating it is very easy, and as long as its used for iteration purposes only and not for random accessing, it’s the best solution. Further, if you need random accessing from time to time, I suggest toArray for that specific moment.
Another point I didn’t raise here is the Queue issue. LinkedList implements extended abilities to the normal List interface which allows it to add and remove elements from its beginning and end. This makes the LinkedList perfect for Queue and Stack purposes – Although in Java 5 they already added a Stack class.

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