Skip to content

fastutil extends the Java™ Collections Framework by providing type-specific maps, sets, lists and queues.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

binarybit10/fastutil

 
 

Repository files navigation

Welcome to fastutil

fastutil is a collection of type-specific Java classes that extend the Java Collections Framework by providing several containers, such as maps, sets, lists and prority queues, implementing the interfaces of the java.util package; it also provides big (64-bit) arrays, sets, lists, and fast, practical I/O classes for binary and text files.

fastutil provides a huge collection of specialized classes generated starting from a parametrized version; the classes are much more compact and much faster than the general ones. Please read the package documentation for more information.

Note that the jar file is huge, due to the large number of classes. To create a small, customized fastutil jar (which you can put in your repo, local maven, etc.), we provide the find-deps.sh shell script. It has mild prerequisites, as only the jdeps tool is required (bundled with JDK 8). It can be used to identify all fastutil classes your project uses and build a minimized jar only containing the necessary classes. You can also have a look at AutoJar or similar tools to extract automatically the necessary classes.

Building

You have to "make sources" to get the actual Java sources; finally, "ant jar" and "ant javadoc" will generate the jar file and the API documentation.

The Java sources are generated using a C preprocessor. The gencsource.sh script reads in a driver file, that is, a Java source that uses some preprocessor-defined symbols and some conditional compilation, and produces a (fake) C source, which includes the driver code and some definitions that customize the environment.

About

fastutil extends the Java™ Collections Framework by providing type-specific maps, sets, lists and queues.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 86.2%
  • HTML 6.2%
  • Shell 4.8%
  • Makefile 2.8%