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⇱ Exploring TakeWhile and DropWhile Functions in Jav


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Exploring TakeWhile and DropWhile Functions in Java

The article explains the working of takeWhile and dropWhile functions in Java with examples.

By Jan. 03, 24 · Tutorial
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TakeWhile

The ‘takeWhile’ method on Java Stream API is used for extracting elements from a stream based on specified conditions. The 'takeWhile' is particularly useful when we want to limit the elements taken from the beginning of a stream until a certain condition becomes false.

Signature: Stream<T> takeWhile(Predicate<? super T> predicate)

Example

Java
List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8);
numbers.stream()
 .takeWhile(x -> x < 5)
 .forEach(System.out :: println); # 1234


DropWhile

 The ‘dropWhile’ is just the opposite of the ‘takeWhile’ method, the ‘dropWhile’ method returns a stream consisting of the remaining elements of the stream after dropping the longest prefix of elements that satisfy the given predicate.

SignatureStream<T> dropWhile(Predicate<? super T> predicate)

Example

Java
private static void dropWhileDemo(){
 List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8);
 numbers.stream()
 .dropWhile(x -> x < 5)
 .forEach(System.out :: print);
}
#5678


When To Use Them:

TakeWhile: 

Use 'takeWhile' when you want to extract elements from the beginning of a stream as long as a certain condition holds. It's useful for creating a subset of elements that satisfy specific criteria.

DropWhile: 

Use 'dropWhile' when you want to skip elements from the beginning of a stream until a certain condition becomes false. It's handy when you want to exclude a prefix of elements based on a condition.

Traditional For Loop and ‘takeWhile’ Example

Say we have a list of integers, and you want to find and print all elements until a certain condition is met using a traditional for loop.

Java
List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8);
int condition = 5;

for (int number : numbers) {
 if (number < condition) {
 System.out.print(number);
 } else {
 break;
 }
}


Let’s achieve the same result using the ‘takeWhile’ method.

Java
List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8);
int condition = 5;
numbers.stream()
 .takeWhile(num -> num < condition)
 .forEach(System.out :: print);


Traditional For Loop and ‘dropWhile’ Example

Java
List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8);
int condition = 5;
for (int number : numbers) {
 if (number > condition) {
 System.out.print(number);
 }
 continue;
}


let's achieve the same result using the 'dropWhile' method.

Java
numbers.stream()
 .dropWhile(x -> x <= condition)
 .forEach(System.out :: print);


Key Points

  • Both methods stop processing as soon as the predicate condition is no longer met. This can lead to efficiency gains, especially for large collections or infinite streams.
  •  If the first element already fails the predicate, takeWhile returns an empty collection. dropWhile returns an empty collection if all elements satisfy the predicate.
  • The order of elements in the resulting collection is preserved from the original collection. 
  • We can combine the ‘takeWhile’ and ‘dropWhile’ functions with the ‘limit’ function to further control the number of elements processed.  takeWhile and limit: Say we have a list of numbers, extract until a certain condition is met, and limit the result to a specific count. dropWhile and limit: Skip numbers until a certain condition is met and limit the result to a specific count. 
Java
List<Integer> numbers = List.of(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9);
List<Integer> takeWhileAndLimit = numbers.stream()
 .takeWhile(x -> x < 6) 
 .limit(3) 
 .collect(Collectors.toList());

System.out.println("TakeWhile and Limit: " + takeWhileAndLimit);

// Using dropWhile and limit
List<Integer> dropWhileAndLimit = numbers.stream()
 .dropWhile(x -> x < 6) 
 .limit(3) 
 .collect(Collectors.toList());

System.out.println("DropWhile and Limit: " + dropWhileAndLimit);

# TakeWhile and Limit: [1, 2, 3]
# DropWhile and Limit: [6, 7, 8]


Common Use Cases for Both ‘takeWhile’ and ‘dropWhile’

- Filtering and Transforming Data

- Processing large or potentially infinite streams efficiently

- Parsing and Validation

- Domain Specific Use-Cases, such as fetching database records until a condition is met.

Key Advantages of ‘takeWhile’ and ‘dropWhile’

  • Conciseness and Readability: Replacing traditional loop with takeWhile and dropWhile simplifies code and improves readability. Focuses on the intent of filtering rather than loop mechanisms.
  • Functional Programming style: Aligns with functional programming principles by emphasizing immutable collections and pure functions, it also promotes composability and reusability of code when working with collections.
  • Efficiency: Both methods stop processing as soon as the predicate condition is no longer met
Functional programming Java (programming language) Stream (computing)

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