Java Tutorial
- Java - Home
- Java - Overview
- Java - History
- Java - Features
- Java vs C++
- Java Virtual Machine(JVM)
- Java - JDK vs JRE vs JVM
- Java - Hello World Program
- Java - Environment Setup
- Java - Basic Syntax
- Java - Variable Types
- Java - Data Types
- Java - Type Casting
- Java - Unicode System
- Java - Basic Operators
- Java - Comments
- Java - User Input
Java Control Statements
- Java - Loop Control
- Java - Decision Making
- Java - If-else
- Java - Switch
- Java - For Loops
- Java - For-Each Loops
- Java - While Loops
- Java - do-while Loops
- Java - Break
- Java - Continue
Object Oriented Programming
- Java - OOPs Concepts
- Java - Object & Classes
- Java - Class Attributes
- Java - Class Methods
- Java - Methods
- Java - Variables Scope
- Java - Constructors
- Java - Access Modifiers
- Java - Inheritance
- Java - Aggregation
- Java - Polymorphism
- Java - Overriding
- Java - Method Overloading
- Java - Dynamic Binding
- Java - Static Binding
- Java - Instance Initializer Block
- Java - Abstraction
- Java - Encapsulation
- Java - Interfaces
- Java - Packages
- Java - Inner Classes
- Java - Static Class
- Java - Anonymous Class
- Java - Singleton Class
- Java - Wrapper Classes
- Java - Enums
- Java - Enum Constructor
- Java - Enum Strings
Java Built-in Classes
- Java - Number
- Java - Boolean
- Java - Characters
- Java - Strings
- Java - Arrays
- Java - Date & Time
- Java - Math Class
Java File Handling
- Java - Files
- Java - Create a File
- Java - Write to File
- Java - Read Files
- Java - Delete Files
- Java - Directories
- Java - I/O Streams
Java Error & Exceptions
- Java - Exceptions
- Java - try-catch Block
- Java - try-with-resources
- Java - Multi-catch Block
- Java - Nested try Block
- Java - Finally Block
- Java - throw Exception
- Java - Exception Propagation
- Java - Built-in Exceptions
- Java - Custom Exception
Java Multithreading
- Java - Multithreading
- Java - Thread Life Cycle
- Java - Creating a Thread
- Java - Starting a Thread
- Java - Joining Threads
- Java - Naming Thread
- Java - Thread Scheduler
- Java - Thread Pools
- Java - Main Thread
- Java - Thread Priority
- Java - Daemon Threads
- Java - Thread Group
- Java - Shutdown Hook
Java Synchronization
- Java - Synchronization
- Java - Block Synchronization
- Java - Static Synchronization
- Java - Inter-thread Communication
- Java - Thread Deadlock
- Java - Interrupting a Thread
- Java - Thread Control
- Java - Reentrant Monitor
Java Networking
- Java - Networking
- Java - Socket Programming
- Java - URL Processing
- Java - URL Class
- Java - URLConnection Class
- Java - HttpURLConnection Class
- Java - Socket Class
- Java - Generics
Java Collections
Java List Interface
Java Queue Interface
Java Map Interface
- Java - Map Interface
- Java - HashMap
- Java - LinkedHashMap
- Java - WeakHashMap
- Java - EnumMap
- Java - SortedMap Interface
- Java - TreeMap
- Java - The IdentityHashMap Class
Java Set Interface
- Java - Set Interface
- Java - HashSet
- Java - EnumSet
- Java - LinkedHashSet
- Java - SortedSet Interface
- Java - TreeSet
Java Data Structures
- Java - Data Structures
- Java - Enumeration
- Java - BitSet Class
- Java - Dictionary
- Java - Hashtable
- Java - Properties
Java Collections Algorithms
Advanced Java
- Java - Command-Line Arguments
- Java - Lambda Expressions
- Java - Sending Email
- Java - Applet Basics
- Java - Javadoc Comments
- Java - Autoboxing and Unboxing
- Java - File Mismatch Method
- Java - REPL (JShell)
- Java - Multi-Release Jar Files
- Java - Private Interface Methods
- Java - Inner Class Diamond Operator
- Java - Multiresolution Image API
- Java - Collection Factory Methods
- Java - Module System
- Java - Nashorn JavaScript
- Java - Optional Class
- Java - Method References
- Java - Functional Interfaces
- Java - Default Methods
- Java - Base64 Encode Decode
- Java - Switch Expressions
- Java - Teeing Collectors
- Java - Microbenchmark
- Java - Text Blocks
- Java - Null Pointer Exception
- Java - Packaging Tools
- Java - Sealed Classes
- Java - Record Classes
- Java - Hidden Classes
- Java - Compact Number Formatting
Java Miscellaneous
- Java - Recursion
- Java - Regular Expressions
- Java - Serialization
- Java - Strings
- Java - Process API Improvements
- Java - Stream API Improvements
- Java - Enhanced @Deprecated Annotation
- Java - CompletableFuture API Improvements
- Java - Array Methods
- Java - Streams
- Java - Datetime Api
- Java 8 - New Features
- Java 9 - New Features
Java APIs & Frameworks
Java Useful Resources
Java - Set Interface
A Set is a Collection that cannot contain duplicate elements. It models the mathematical set abstraction.
The Set interface contains only methods inherited from Collection and adds the restriction that duplicate elements are prohibited.
Set also adds a stronger contract on the behavior of the equals and hashCode operations, allowing Set instances to be compared meaningfully even if their implementation types differ.
Set Interface Methods
The methods declared by Set are summarized in the following table −
Sr.No. | Method & Description |
---|---|
1 | add( ) Adds an object to the collection. |
2 | clear( ) Removes all objects from the collection. |
3 | contains( ) Returns true if a specified object is an element within the collection. |
4 | isEmpty( ) Returns true if the collection has no elements. |
5 | iterator( ) Returns an Iterator object for the collection, which may be used to retrieve an object. |
6 | remove( ) Removes a specified object from the collection. |
7 | size( ) Returns the number of elements in the collection. |
Set Interface Examples
Set has its implementation in various classes like HashSet, TreeSet, LinkedHashSet. Below are some of the implementations of the Set interface in Java.
Example to Implement Set Using HashSet
Following is an example to explain Set functionality using HashSet −
import java.util.HashSet; import java.util.Set; public class SetDemo { public static void main(String args[]) { int count[] = {34, 22,10,60,30,22}; Set<Integer> set = new HashSet<>(); try { for(int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { set.add(count[i]); } System.out.println(set); } catch(Exception e) {} } }
Output
[34, 22, 10, 60, 30]
Example to Implement Set Using TreeSet
Following is an example to explain Set functionality using TreeSet −
import java.util.HashSet; import java.util.Set; import java.util.TreeSet; public class SetDemo { public static void main(String args[]) { int count[] = {34, 22,10,60,30,22}; Set<Integer> set = new HashSet<>(); try { for(int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { set.add(count[i]); } System.out.println(set); TreeSet<Integer> sortedSet = new TreeSet<>(set); System.out.println("The sorted list is:"); System.out.println(sortedSet); System.out.println("The First element of the set is: "+ (Integer)sortedSet.first()); System.out.println("The last element of the set is: "+ (Integer)sortedSet.last()); } catch(Exception e) {} } }
Output
[34, 22, 10, 60, 30] The sorted list is: [10, 22, 30, 34, 60] The First element of the set is: 10 The last element of the set is: 60
Example to Implement Set Using LinkedHashSet
Following is an example to explain Set functionality using LinkedHashSet opearations −
import java.util.LinkedHashSet; import java.util.Set; public class SetDemo { public static void main(String args[]) { int count[] = {34, 22,10,60,30,22}; Set<Integer> set = new LinkedHashSet<>(); try { for(int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { set.add(count[i]); } System.out.println(set); } catch(Exception e) {} } }
Output
[34, 22, 10, 60, 30]
To Continue Learning Please Login
Login with Google