There is no specified maximum size of these structures.
The actual practical size limit is probably somewhere in the region of Integer.MAX_VALUE (i.e. 2147483647, roughly 2 billion elements), as that’s the maximum size of an array in Java.
- A
HashSetuses aHashMapinternally, so it has the same maximum size as that- A
HashMapuses an array which always has a size that is a power of two, so it can be at most 230 = 1073741824 elements big (since the next power of two is bigger thanInteger.MAX_VALUE). - Normally the number of elements is at most the number of buckets multiplied by the load factor (0.75 by default). However, when the
HashMapstops resizing, then it will still allow you to add elements, exploiting the fact that each bucket is managed via a linked list. Therefore the only limit for elements in aHashMap/HashSetis memory.
- A
- A
Vectoruses an array internally which has a maximum size of exactlyInteger.MAX_VALUE, so it can’t support more than that many elements - A
LinkedListdoesn’t use an array as the underlying storage, so that doesn’t limit the size. It uses a classical doubly linked list structure with no inherent limit, so its size is only bounded by the available memory. Note that aLinkedListwill report the size wrongly if it is bigger thanInteger.MAX_VALUE, because it uses aintfield to store the size and the return type ofsize()isintas well.
Note that while the Collection API does define how a Collection with more than Integer.MAX_VALUE elements should behave. Most importantly it states this the size() documentation:
If this collection contains more than
Integer.MAX_VALUEelements, returnsInteger.MAX_VALUE.
Note that while HashMap, HashSet and LinkedList seem to support more than Integer.MAX_VALUE elements, none of those implement the size() method in this way (i.e. they simply let the internal size field overflow).
This leads me to believe that other operations also aren’t well-defined in this condition.
So I’d say it’s safe to use those general-purpose collections with up to Integer.MAX_VLAUE elements. If you know that you’ll need to store more than that, then you should switch to dedicated collection implementations that actually support this.