Comparator
public
interface
Comparator
| java.util.Comparator<T> |
A comparison function, which imposes a total ordering on
some collection of objects. Comparators can be passed to a sort
method (such as Collections.sort or Arrays.sort) to allow precise control over the sort order.
Comparators can also be used to control the order of certain data
structures (such as sorted sets or
sorted maps), or to provide an ordering for
collections of objects that don't have a natural ordering.
The ordering imposed by a comparator c on a set of elements
S is said to be consistent with equals if and only if
c.compare(e1, e2)==0 has the same boolean value as
e1.equals(e2) for every e1 and e2 in
S.
Caution should be exercised when using a comparator capable of imposing an
ordering inconsistent with equals to order a sorted set (or sorted map).
Suppose a sorted set (or sorted map) with an explicit comparator c
is used with elements (or keys) drawn from a set S. If the
ordering imposed by c on S is inconsistent with equals,
the sorted set (or sorted map) will behave "strangely." In particular the
sorted set (or sorted map) will violate the general contract for set (or
map), which is defined in terms of equals.
For example, suppose one adds two elements a and b such that
(a.equals(b) && c.compare(a, b) != 0)
to an empty TreeSet with comparator c.
The second add operation will return
true (and the size of the tree set will increase) because a and
b are not equivalent from the tree set's perspective, even though
this is contrary to the specification of the
S