A Map
that further provides a total ordering on its keys.
The map is ordered according to the natural of its keys, or by a Comparator
typically
provided at sorted map creation time. This order is reflected when
iterating over the sorted map's collection views (returned by the
entrySet
, keySet
and values
methods).
Several additional operations are provided to take advantage of the
ordering. (This interface is the map analogue of SortedSet
.)
All keys inserted into a sorted map must implement the Comparable
interface (or be accepted by the specified comparator). Furthermore, all
such keys must be mutually comparable: k1.compareTo(k2)
(or
comparator.compare(k1, k2)
) must not throw a
ClassCastException
for any keys k1
and k2
in
the sorted map. Attempts to violate this restriction will cause the
offending method or constructor invocation to throw a
ClassCastException
.
Note that the ordering maintained by a sorted map (whether or not an
explicit comparator is provided) must be consistent with equals if
the sorted map is to correctly implement the Map
interface. (See
the Comparable
interface or Comparator
interface for a
precise definition of consistent with equals.) This is so because
the Map
interface is defined in terms of the equals
operation, but a sorted map performs all key comparisons using its
compareTo
(or compare
) method, so two keys that are
deemed equal by this method are, from the standpoint of the sorted map,
equal. The behavior of a tree map is well-defined even if its
ordering is inconsistent with equals; it just fails to obey the general
contract of the Map
interface.
All general-purpose sorted map implementation classes should provide four "standard" constructors. It is not possible to enforce this recommendation though as required constructors cannot be specified by interfaces. The expected "standard" constructors for all sorted map implementations are:
Comparator
, which
creates an empty sorted map sorted according to the specified comparator. Map
, which creates
a new map with the same key-value mappings as its argument, sorted
according to the keys' natural ordering. SortedMap
, which
creates a new sorted map with the same key-value mappings and the same
ordering as the input sorted map.Note: several methods return submaps with restricted key
ranges. Such ranges are half-open, that is, they include their low
endpoint but not their high endpoint (where applicable). If you need a
closed range (which includes both endpoints), and the key type
allows for calculation of the successor of a given key, merely request
the subrange from lowEndpoint
to
successor(highEndpoint)
. For example, suppose that m
is a map whose keys are strings. The following idiom obtains a view
containing all of the key-value mappings in m
whose keys are
between low
and high
, inclusive:
SortedMap<String, V> sub = m.subMap(low, high+"\0");A similar technique can be used to generate an open range (which contains neither endpoint). The following idiom obtains a view containing all of the key-value mappings in
m
whose keys
are between low
and high
, exclusive:SortedMap<String, V> sub = m.subMap(low+"\0", high);
This interface is a member of the Java Collections Framework.
extends
<K> | the type of keys maintained by this map | |
<V> | the type of mapped values |
Map, TreeMap, SortedSet, Comparator, Comparable, Collection, ClassCastException