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arraylist - How to use an array list in Java?

I need to know if I store my data in an ArrayList and I need to get the value that I've stored in it.

For example : if I have an array list like this

      ArrayList A = new ArrayList();
      A = {"Soad", "mahran"};

and I want to get each String element, how can I do it?

I've tried to do it by the following code:

package arraylist;

import java.util.ArrayList;

public class Main {

        public static void main(String[] args) {
        ArrayList S = new ArrayList();

        String A = "soad ";
        S.add(A);
        S.add("A");
        String F = S.toString();
        System.out.println(F);
        String [] W = F.split(",");
        for(int i=0 ; i<W.length ; i++) {
           System.out.println(W[i]);
        }
    }
}
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1 Answer

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The following snippet gives an example that shows how to get an element from a List at a specified index, and also how to use the advanced for-each loop to iterate through all elements:

    import java.util.*;

    //...

    List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
    list.add("Hello!");
    list.add("How are you?");

    System.out.println(list.get(0)); // prints "Hello!"

    for (String s : list) {
        System.out.println(s);
    } // prints "Hello!", "How are you?"

Note the following:

  • Generic List<String> and ArrayList<String> types are used instead of raw ArrayList type.
  • Variable names starts with lowercase
  • list is declared as List<String>, i.e. the interface type instead of implementation type ArrayList<String>.

References

API:

Don't use raw types

  • JLS 4.8 Raw Types

    The use of raw types is allowed only as a concession to compatibility of legacy code. The use of raw types in code written after the introduction of genericity into the Java programming language is strongly discouraged. It is possible that future versions of the Java programming language will disallow the use of raw types.

  • Effective Java 2nd Edition: Item 23: Don't use raw types in new code

    If you use raw types, you lose all the safety and expressiveness benefits of generics.

Prefer interfaces to implementation classes in type declarations

  • Effective Java 2nd Edition: Item 52: Refer to objects by their interfaces

    [...] you should favor the use of interfaces rather than classes to refer to objects. If appropriate interface types exist, then parameters, return values, variables, and fields should all be declared using interface types.

Naming conventions

Variables: Except for variables, all instance, class, and class constants are in mixed case with a lowercase first letter.


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