reverseing a queue and converting it into an int array












6














I have a queue<Integer> declared as Queue<Integer> queue=new LinkedList();, I need to reverse the elments order in it, and then convert it into an int array. I wrote below code:



Collections.reverse((List)queue);
int res=queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


This code has two problems:




  1. the explict casting (List)queue;

  2. I wonder if there is a one line solution.


So do we have any more elegant way to do this?





clearify the problem:



whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the reversed elements is what I need.










share|improve this question





























    6














    I have a queue<Integer> declared as Queue<Integer> queue=new LinkedList();, I need to reverse the elments order in it, and then convert it into an int array. I wrote below code:



    Collections.reverse((List)queue);
    int res=queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


    This code has two problems:




    1. the explict casting (List)queue;

    2. I wonder if there is a one line solution.


    So do we have any more elegant way to do this?





    clearify the problem:



    whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the reversed elements is what I need.










    share|improve this question



























      6












      6








      6


      1





      I have a queue<Integer> declared as Queue<Integer> queue=new LinkedList();, I need to reverse the elments order in it, and then convert it into an int array. I wrote below code:



      Collections.reverse((List)queue);
      int res=queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


      This code has two problems:




      1. the explict casting (List)queue;

      2. I wonder if there is a one line solution.


      So do we have any more elegant way to do this?





      clearify the problem:



      whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the reversed elements is what I need.










      share|improve this question















      I have a queue<Integer> declared as Queue<Integer> queue=new LinkedList();, I need to reverse the elments order in it, and then convert it into an int array. I wrote below code:



      Collections.reverse((List)queue);
      int res=queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


      This code has two problems:




      1. the explict casting (List)queue;

      2. I wonder if there is a one line solution.


      So do we have any more elegant way to do this?





      clearify the problem:



      whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the reversed elements is what I need.







      java collections queue






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago

























      asked 2 hours ago









      ZhaoGang

      1,6011015




      1,6011015
























          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          3














          The Collections.reverse implies only to List which is just one type of Collection, you cannot cast a Queue to a List. But you can try casting it to a LinkedList as:



          Collections.reverse((LinkedList)queue);


          Details:



          I doubt that there is a built-in API for reversing the queue. You could still follow a conventional way of doing that using a Stack as :



          Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>();
          while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
          stack.add(queue.remove());
          }
          while (!stack.isEmpty()) {
          queue.add(stack.pop());
          }


          and then convert to an array as you will



          int res = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();




          On the other hand, if a Deque satisfies your needs currently, you can simply rely on the LinkedList itself since it implements a Deque as well. Then your current implementation would be as simple as :



          LinkedList<Integer> dequeue = new LinkedList<>();
          Collections.reverse(dequeue);
          int res = dequeue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





          whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the
          reversed elements is what I need.




          Another solution from what others have already suggested is to reverse the Stream of the queue and then mapToInt to convert to an array as :



          Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
          int res = reverse(queue.stream()).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


          This uses a utility reverse suggested by Stuart Marks in this answer such that:



          @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
          static <T> Stream<T> reverse(Stream<T> input) {
          Object temp = input.toArray();
          return (Stream<T>) IntStream.range(0, temp.length)
          .mapToObj(i -> temp[temp.length - i - 1]);
          }





          share|improve this answer























          • You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
            – Marcono1234
            1 hour ago










          • If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
            – Slaw
            1 hour ago












          • @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
            – nullpointer
            23 mins ago





















          2














          In Java8 version you can use Stream API to help you.



          The skeleton of code like this:



          int reversedQueue = queue.stream()
          .collect(Collector.of(() -> new ArrayDeque<Integer>(), ArrayDeque::addFirst, (a,b)->a))
          .stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





          share|improve this answer





















          • It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
            – Marcono1234
            1 hour ago










          • @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
            – TongChen
            42 mins ago



















          1














          First, please don't use raw types (do use the diamond operator). Not quite a one liner, but you could first convert to an int and then use commons lang ArrayUtils.reverse(int) like



          Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
          // ...
          int arr = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
          ArrayUtils.reverse(arr);


          You could also write your own int reverse method that allowed for a fluent interface (e.g. return the int) then you could make it a one liner. Like,



          public static int reverse(int arr) {
          for (int i = 0; i < arr.length / 2; i++) {
          int temp = arr[i];
          arr[i] = arr[arr.length - i - 1];
          arr[arr.length - i - 1] = temp;
          }
          return arr;
          }


          And then



          int arr = reverse(queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray());





          share|improve this answer





















          • but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
            – nullpointer
            2 hours ago








          • 2




            @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
            – Elliott Frisch
            2 hours ago



















          1














          This should work with Eclipse Collections



          int res = LazyIterate.adapt(queue)
          .collectInt(Integer::intValue)
          .toList()
          .asReversed()
          .toArray();


          Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.






          share|improve this answer





























            0














            This is one line, but it may not be very efficient:



            int res = queue.stream()
            .collect(LinkedList::new, (l, e) -> l.addLast(e), (l1, l2) -> l1.addAll(l2))
            .stream()
            .mapToInt(Integer::intValue)
            .toArray();


            If you want to be efficient and readable, you should continue using what you have now.






            share|improve this answer





















            • This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
              – Marcono1234
              1 hour ago



















            0














            I think your are right, A raw type should not put in your code. the following is the best I can do.



            Integer intArray = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.collectingAndThen(Collectors.toList(), list -> {
            Collections.reverse(list);
            return list;
            })).toArray(new Integer[queue.size()]);





            share|improve this answer























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              6 Answers
              6






              active

              oldest

              votes








              6 Answers
              6






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              3














              The Collections.reverse implies only to List which is just one type of Collection, you cannot cast a Queue to a List. But you can try casting it to a LinkedList as:



              Collections.reverse((LinkedList)queue);


              Details:



              I doubt that there is a built-in API for reversing the queue. You could still follow a conventional way of doing that using a Stack as :



              Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>();
              while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
              stack.add(queue.remove());
              }
              while (!stack.isEmpty()) {
              queue.add(stack.pop());
              }


              and then convert to an array as you will



              int res = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();




              On the other hand, if a Deque satisfies your needs currently, you can simply rely on the LinkedList itself since it implements a Deque as well. Then your current implementation would be as simple as :



              LinkedList<Integer> dequeue = new LinkedList<>();
              Collections.reverse(dequeue);
              int res = dequeue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the
              reversed elements is what I need.




              Another solution from what others have already suggested is to reverse the Stream of the queue and then mapToInt to convert to an array as :



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              int res = reverse(queue.stream()).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


              This uses a utility reverse suggested by Stuart Marks in this answer such that:



              @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
              static <T> Stream<T> reverse(Stream<T> input) {
              Object temp = input.toArray();
              return (Stream<T>) IntStream.range(0, temp.length)
              .mapToObj(i -> temp[temp.length - i - 1]);
              }





              share|improve this answer























              • You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
                – Slaw
                1 hour ago












              • @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
                – nullpointer
                23 mins ago


















              3














              The Collections.reverse implies only to List which is just one type of Collection, you cannot cast a Queue to a List. But you can try casting it to a LinkedList as:



              Collections.reverse((LinkedList)queue);


              Details:



              I doubt that there is a built-in API for reversing the queue. You could still follow a conventional way of doing that using a Stack as :



              Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>();
              while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
              stack.add(queue.remove());
              }
              while (!stack.isEmpty()) {
              queue.add(stack.pop());
              }


              and then convert to an array as you will



              int res = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();




              On the other hand, if a Deque satisfies your needs currently, you can simply rely on the LinkedList itself since it implements a Deque as well. Then your current implementation would be as simple as :



              LinkedList<Integer> dequeue = new LinkedList<>();
              Collections.reverse(dequeue);
              int res = dequeue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the
              reversed elements is what I need.




              Another solution from what others have already suggested is to reverse the Stream of the queue and then mapToInt to convert to an array as :



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              int res = reverse(queue.stream()).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


              This uses a utility reverse suggested by Stuart Marks in this answer such that:



              @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
              static <T> Stream<T> reverse(Stream<T> input) {
              Object temp = input.toArray();
              return (Stream<T>) IntStream.range(0, temp.length)
              .mapToObj(i -> temp[temp.length - i - 1]);
              }





              share|improve this answer























              • You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
                – Slaw
                1 hour ago












              • @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
                – nullpointer
                23 mins ago
















              3












              3








              3






              The Collections.reverse implies only to List which is just one type of Collection, you cannot cast a Queue to a List. But you can try casting it to a LinkedList as:



              Collections.reverse((LinkedList)queue);


              Details:



              I doubt that there is a built-in API for reversing the queue. You could still follow a conventional way of doing that using a Stack as :



              Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>();
              while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
              stack.add(queue.remove());
              }
              while (!stack.isEmpty()) {
              queue.add(stack.pop());
              }


              and then convert to an array as you will



              int res = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();




              On the other hand, if a Deque satisfies your needs currently, you can simply rely on the LinkedList itself since it implements a Deque as well. Then your current implementation would be as simple as :



              LinkedList<Integer> dequeue = new LinkedList<>();
              Collections.reverse(dequeue);
              int res = dequeue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the
              reversed elements is what I need.




              Another solution from what others have already suggested is to reverse the Stream of the queue and then mapToInt to convert to an array as :



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              int res = reverse(queue.stream()).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


              This uses a utility reverse suggested by Stuart Marks in this answer such that:



              @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
              static <T> Stream<T> reverse(Stream<T> input) {
              Object temp = input.toArray();
              return (Stream<T>) IntStream.range(0, temp.length)
              .mapToObj(i -> temp[temp.length - i - 1]);
              }





              share|improve this answer














              The Collections.reverse implies only to List which is just one type of Collection, you cannot cast a Queue to a List. But you can try casting it to a LinkedList as:



              Collections.reverse((LinkedList)queue);


              Details:



              I doubt that there is a built-in API for reversing the queue. You could still follow a conventional way of doing that using a Stack as :



              Stack<Integer> stack = new Stack<>();
              while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
              stack.add(queue.remove());
              }
              while (!stack.isEmpty()) {
              queue.add(stack.pop());
              }


              and then convert to an array as you will



              int res = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();




              On the other hand, if a Deque satisfies your needs currently, you can simply rely on the LinkedList itself since it implements a Deque as well. Then your current implementation would be as simple as :



              LinkedList<Integer> dequeue = new LinkedList<>();
              Collections.reverse(dequeue);
              int res = dequeue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              whether the queue is reversed is not important. An int array of the
              reversed elements is what I need.




              Another solution from what others have already suggested is to reverse the Stream of the queue and then mapToInt to convert to an array as :



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              int res = reverse(queue.stream()).mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();


              This uses a utility reverse suggested by Stuart Marks in this answer such that:



              @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
              static <T> Stream<T> reverse(Stream<T> input) {
              Object temp = input.toArray();
              return (Stream<T>) IntStream.range(0, temp.length)
              .mapToObj(i -> temp[temp.length - i - 1]);
              }






              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 25 mins ago

























              answered 2 hours ago









              nullpointer

              43.1k1093178




              43.1k1093178












              • You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
                – Slaw
                1 hour ago












              • @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
                – nullpointer
                23 mins ago




















              • You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
                – Slaw
                1 hour ago












              • @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
                – nullpointer
                23 mins ago


















              You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
              – Marcono1234
              1 hour ago




              You should probably not be using the Stack class since it extends Vector and is therefore synchronized, which is not needed here and only decreases performance.
              – Marcono1234
              1 hour ago












              If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
              – Slaw
              1 hour ago






              If using a Deque it might be more efficient to use Deque.descendingIterator() combined with Spliterators and StreamSupport, assuming only the reversed array is needed and not the reversed Deque. The code will be more verbose, however.
              – Slaw
              1 hour ago














              @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
              – nullpointer
              23 mins ago






              @Slaw It would be sure. Just that the intention of when I wrote the answer was to ensure the original store is reversed, but later the OP clarified that the reversed output is what matters eventually.
              – nullpointer
              23 mins ago















              2














              In Java8 version you can use Stream API to help you.



              The skeleton of code like this:



              int reversedQueue = queue.stream()
              .collect(Collector.of(() -> new ArrayDeque<Integer>(), ArrayDeque::addFirst, (a,b)->a))
              .stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              share|improve this answer





















              • It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
                – TongChen
                42 mins ago
















              2














              In Java8 version you can use Stream API to help you.



              The skeleton of code like this:



              int reversedQueue = queue.stream()
              .collect(Collector.of(() -> new ArrayDeque<Integer>(), ArrayDeque::addFirst, (a,b)->a))
              .stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              share|improve this answer





















              • It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
                – TongChen
                42 mins ago














              2












              2








              2






              In Java8 version you can use Stream API to help you.



              The skeleton of code like this:



              int reversedQueue = queue.stream()
              .collect(Collector.of(() -> new ArrayDeque<Integer>(), ArrayDeque::addFirst, (a,b)->a))
              .stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();





              share|improve this answer












              In Java8 version you can use Stream API to help you.



              The skeleton of code like this:



              int reversedQueue = queue.stream()
              .collect(Collector.of(() -> new ArrayDeque<Integer>(), ArrayDeque::addFirst, (a,b)->a))
              .stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();






              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 2 hours ago









              TongChen

              1857




              1857












              • It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
                – TongChen
                42 mins ago


















              • It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
                – Marcono1234
                1 hour ago










              • @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
                – TongChen
                42 mins ago
















              It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
              – Marcono1234
              1 hour ago




              It looks like your combiner ((a,b)->a) is missing b in the result
              – Marcono1234
              1 hour ago












              @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
              – TongChen
              42 mins ago




              @Marcono1234 There is no problem.The third parameter of Collector.of method is one BinaryOperator it's the combiner function for the new collector. In our code there only one collector,so can't miss any element in collector.
              – TongChen
              42 mins ago











              1














              First, please don't use raw types (do use the diamond operator). Not quite a one liner, but you could first convert to an int and then use commons lang ArrayUtils.reverse(int) like



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              // ...
              int arr = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
              ArrayUtils.reverse(arr);


              You could also write your own int reverse method that allowed for a fluent interface (e.g. return the int) then you could make it a one liner. Like,



              public static int reverse(int arr) {
              for (int i = 0; i < arr.length / 2; i++) {
              int temp = arr[i];
              arr[i] = arr[arr.length - i - 1];
              arr[arr.length - i - 1] = temp;
              }
              return arr;
              }


              And then



              int arr = reverse(queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray());





              share|improve this answer





















              • but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
                – nullpointer
                2 hours ago








              • 2




                @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
                – Elliott Frisch
                2 hours ago
















              1














              First, please don't use raw types (do use the diamond operator). Not quite a one liner, but you could first convert to an int and then use commons lang ArrayUtils.reverse(int) like



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              // ...
              int arr = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
              ArrayUtils.reverse(arr);


              You could also write your own int reverse method that allowed for a fluent interface (e.g. return the int) then you could make it a one liner. Like,



              public static int reverse(int arr) {
              for (int i = 0; i < arr.length / 2; i++) {
              int temp = arr[i];
              arr[i] = arr[arr.length - i - 1];
              arr[arr.length - i - 1] = temp;
              }
              return arr;
              }


              And then



              int arr = reverse(queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray());





              share|improve this answer





















              • but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
                – nullpointer
                2 hours ago








              • 2




                @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
                – Elliott Frisch
                2 hours ago














              1












              1








              1






              First, please don't use raw types (do use the diamond operator). Not quite a one liner, but you could first convert to an int and then use commons lang ArrayUtils.reverse(int) like



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              // ...
              int arr = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
              ArrayUtils.reverse(arr);


              You could also write your own int reverse method that allowed for a fluent interface (e.g. return the int) then you could make it a one liner. Like,



              public static int reverse(int arr) {
              for (int i = 0; i < arr.length / 2; i++) {
              int temp = arr[i];
              arr[i] = arr[arr.length - i - 1];
              arr[arr.length - i - 1] = temp;
              }
              return arr;
              }


              And then



              int arr = reverse(queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray());





              share|improve this answer












              First, please don't use raw types (do use the diamond operator). Not quite a one liner, but you could first convert to an int and then use commons lang ArrayUtils.reverse(int) like



              Queue<Integer> queue = new LinkedList<>();
              // ...
              int arr = queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray();
              ArrayUtils.reverse(arr);


              You could also write your own int reverse method that allowed for a fluent interface (e.g. return the int) then you could make it a one liner. Like,



              public static int reverse(int arr) {
              for (int i = 0; i < arr.length / 2; i++) {
              int temp = arr[i];
              arr[i] = arr[arr.length - i - 1];
              arr[arr.length - i - 1] = temp;
              }
              return arr;
              }


              And then



              int arr = reverse(queue.stream().mapToInt(Integer::intValue).toArray());






              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 2 hours ago









              Elliott Frisch

              153k1389178




              153k1389178












              • but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
                – nullpointer
                2 hours ago








              • 2




                @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
                – Elliott Frisch
                2 hours ago


















              • but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
                – nullpointer
                2 hours ago








              • 2




                @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
                – Elliott Frisch
                2 hours ago
















              but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
              – nullpointer
              2 hours ago






              but this wouldn't reverse the queue.
              – nullpointer
              2 hours ago






              2




              2




              @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
              – Elliott Frisch
              2 hours ago




              @nullpointer True. But, if the goal is a reversed int then it isn't clear that the queue must also be reversed. In fact, I would assume the queue goes out of scope and the int is returned to the caller.
              – Elliott Frisch
              2 hours ago











              1














              This should work with Eclipse Collections



              int res = LazyIterate.adapt(queue)
              .collectInt(Integer::intValue)
              .toList()
              .asReversed()
              .toArray();


              Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.






              share|improve this answer


























                1














                This should work with Eclipse Collections



                int res = LazyIterate.adapt(queue)
                .collectInt(Integer::intValue)
                .toList()
                .asReversed()
                .toArray();


                Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.






                share|improve this answer
























                  1












                  1








                  1






                  This should work with Eclipse Collections



                  int res = LazyIterate.adapt(queue)
                  .collectInt(Integer::intValue)
                  .toList()
                  .asReversed()
                  .toArray();


                  Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.






                  share|improve this answer












                  This should work with Eclipse Collections



                  int res = LazyIterate.adapt(queue)
                  .collectInt(Integer::intValue)
                  .toList()
                  .asReversed()
                  .toArray();


                  Note: I am a committer for Eclipse Collections.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 30 mins ago









                  Donald Raab

                  4,21112029




                  4,21112029























                      0














                      This is one line, but it may not be very efficient:



                      int res = queue.stream()
                      .collect(LinkedList::new, (l, e) -> l.addLast(e), (l1, l2) -> l1.addAll(l2))
                      .stream()
                      .mapToInt(Integer::intValue)
                      .toArray();


                      If you want to be efficient and readable, you should continue using what you have now.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                        – Marcono1234
                        1 hour ago
















                      0














                      This is one line, but it may not be very efficient:



                      int res = queue.stream()
                      .collect(LinkedList::new, (l, e) -> l.addLast(e), (l1, l2) -> l1.addAll(l2))
                      .stream()
                      .mapToInt(Integer::intValue)
                      .toArray();


                      If you want to be efficient and readable, you should continue using what you have now.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                        – Marcono1234
                        1 hour ago














                      0












                      0








                      0






                      This is one line, but it may not be very efficient:



                      int res = queue.stream()
                      .collect(LinkedList::new, (l, e) -> l.addLast(e), (l1, l2) -> l1.addAll(l2))
                      .stream()
                      .mapToInt(Integer::intValue)
                      .toArray();


                      If you want to be efficient and readable, you should continue using what you have now.






                      share|improve this answer












                      This is one line, but it may not be very efficient:



                      int res = queue.stream()
                      .collect(LinkedList::new, (l, e) -> l.addLast(e), (l1, l2) -> l1.addAll(l2))
                      .stream()
                      .mapToInt(Integer::intValue)
                      .toArray();


                      If you want to be efficient and readable, you should continue using what you have now.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 2 hours ago









                      Jai

                      5,72411231




                      5,72411231












                      • This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                        – Marcono1234
                        1 hour ago


















                      • This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                        – Marcono1234
                        1 hour ago
















                      This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                      – Marcono1234
                      1 hour ago




                      This does not reverse the queue (or its values)
                      – Marcono1234
                      1 hour ago











                      0














                      I think your are right, A raw type should not put in your code. the following is the best I can do.



                      Integer intArray = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.collectingAndThen(Collectors.toList(), list -> {
                      Collections.reverse(list);
                      return list;
                      })).toArray(new Integer[queue.size()]);





                      share|improve this answer




























                        0














                        I think your are right, A raw type should not put in your code. the following is the best I can do.



                        Integer intArray = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.collectingAndThen(Collectors.toList(), list -> {
                        Collections.reverse(list);
                        return list;
                        })).toArray(new Integer[queue.size()]);





                        share|improve this answer


























                          0












                          0








                          0






                          I think your are right, A raw type should not put in your code. the following is the best I can do.



                          Integer intArray = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.collectingAndThen(Collectors.toList(), list -> {
                          Collections.reverse(list);
                          return list;
                          })).toArray(new Integer[queue.size()]);





                          share|improve this answer














                          I think your are right, A raw type should not put in your code. the following is the best I can do.



                          Integer intArray = queue.stream().collect(Collectors.collectingAndThen(Collectors.toList(), list -> {
                          Collections.reverse(list);
                          return list;
                          })).toArray(new Integer[queue.size()]);






                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited 2 hours ago

























                          answered 2 hours ago









                          Keijack

                          1466




                          1466






























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