Cleanest way to create a Guava Multimap from a Java 8 stream

You can just use the Guava Multimaps factory:

ImmutableMultimap<String, Foo> foosById = Multimaps.index(foos, Foo::getId);

or wrap a call to Multimaps.index with a Collector<T, A, R> interface (shown below, in an unoptimized naive implementation).

Multimap<String, Foo> collect = foos.stream()
        .collect(MultimapCollector.toMultimap(Foo::getId));

and the Collector:

public class MultimapCollector<T, K, V> implements Collector<T, Multimap<K, V>, Multimap<K, V>> {

    private final Function<T, K> keyGetter;
    private final Function<T, V> valueGetter;

    public MultimapCollector(Function<T, K> keyGetter, Function<T, V> valueGetter) {
        this.keyGetter = keyGetter;
        this.valueGetter = valueGetter;
    }

    public static <T, K, V> MultimapCollector<T, K, V> toMultimap(Function<T, K> keyGetter, Function<T, V> valueGetter) {
        return new MultimapCollector<>(keyGetter, valueGetter);
    }

    public static <T, K, V> MultimapCollector<T, K, T> toMultimap(Function<T, K> keyGetter) {
        return new MultimapCollector<>(keyGetter, v -> v);
    }

    @Override
    public Supplier<Multimap<K, V>> supplier() {
        return ArrayListMultimap::create;
    }

    @Override
    public BiConsumer<Multimap<K, V>, T> accumulator() {
        return (map, element) -> map.put(keyGetter.apply(element), valueGetter.apply(element));
    }

    @Override
    public BinaryOperator<Multimap<K, V>> combiner() {
        return (map1, map2) -> {
            map1.putAll(map2);
            return map1;
        };
    }

    @Override
    public Function<Multimap<K, V>, Multimap<K, V>> finisher() {
        return map -> map;
    }

    @Override
    public Set<Characteristics> characteristics() {
        return ImmutableSet.of(Characteristics.IDENTITY_FINISH);
    }
}

Leave a Comment

Hata!: SQLSTATE[HY000] [1045] Access denied for user 'divattrend_liink'@'localhost' (using password: YES)