Java Collections

TreeMap class in collection framework


TreeMap class
  • A TreeMap contains values based on the key. It implements the NavigableMap interface and extends AbstractMap class.
  • It contains only unique elements.
  • It cannot have null key but can have multiple null values.
  • It is same as HashMap instead maintains ascending order.

The TreeMap class implements the Map interface by using a tree. A TreeMap provides an efficient means of storing key/value pairs in sorted order, and allows rapid retrieval.

You should note that, unlike a hash map, a tree map guarantees that its elements will be sorted in ascending key order.

The TreeMap class supports four constructors. The first form constructs an empty tree map that will be sorted by using the natural order of its keys:

TreeMap( )

The second form constructs an empty tree-based map that will be sorted by using the Comparator comp:

TreeMap(Comparator comp)

The third form initializes a tree map with the entries from m, which will be sorted by using the natural order of the keys:

TreeMap(Map m)

The fourth form initializes a tree map with the entries from sm, which will be sorted in the same order as sm:

TreeMap(SortedMap sm)

Apart from the methods inherited from its parent classes, TreeMap defines following methods:

SN Methods with Description
1 void clear()
Removes all mappings from this TreeMap.
2 Object clone()
Returns a shallow copy of this TreeMap instance.
3 Comparator comparator()
Returns the comparator used to order this map, or null if this map uses its keys’ natural order.
4 boolean containsKey(Object key)
Returns true if this map contains a mapping for the specified key.
5 boolean containsValue(Object value) 
Returns true if this map maps one or more keys to the specified value.
6 Set entrySet() 
Returns a set view of the mappings contained in this map.
7 Object firstKey() 
Returns the first (lowest) key currently in this sorted map.
8 Object get(Object key) 
Returns the value to which this map maps the specified key.
9 SortedMap headMap(Object toKey) 
Returns a view of the portion of this map whose keys are strictly less than toKey.
10 Set keySet()
Returns a Set view of the keys contained in this map.
11 Object lastKey() 
Returns the last (highest) key currently in this sorted map.
12 Object put(Object key, Object value) 
Associates the specified value with the specified key in this map.
13 void putAll(Map map) 
Copies all of the mappings from the specified map to this map.
14 Object remove(Object key) 
Removes the mapping for this key from this TreeMap if present.
15 int size() 
Returns the number of key-value mappings in this map.
16 SortedMap subMap(Object fromKey, Object toKey) 
Returns a view of the portion of this map whose keys range from fromKey, inclusive, to toKey, exclusive.
17 SortedMap tailMap(Object fromKey) 
Returns a view of the portion of this map whose keys are greater than or equal to fromKey.
18 Collection values() 
Returns a collection view of the values contained in this map.

Example:

import java.util.*;
class TreeMapDemo
{
 public static void main(String args[])
 {
  TreeMap< String,Integer> tm = new TreeMap< String,Integer>();
  tm.put("a",new Integer(100));
  tm.put("b",new Integer(200));
  tm.put("c",new Integer(300));
  tm.put("d",new Integer(400));

  Set< Map.Entry< String,Integer> > st = tm.entrySet();
  for(Map.Entry me:st)  
  {
   System.out.print(me.getKey()+":");
   System.out.println(me.getValue());
  }
 }
}

Output:
a 100
b 200
c 300
d 400

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Dinesh Rajput

Dinesh Rajput is the chief editor of a website Dineshonjava, a technical blog dedicated to the Spring and Java technologies. It has a series of articles related to Java technologies. Dinesh has been a Spring enthusiast since 2008 and is a Pivotal Certified Spring Professional, an author of a book Spring 5 Design Pattern, and a blogger. He has more than 10 years of experience with different aspects of Spring and Java design and development. His core expertise lies in the latest version of Spring Framework, Spring Boot, Spring Security, creating REST APIs, Microservice Architecture, Reactive Pattern, Spring AOP, Design Patterns, Struts, Hibernate, Web Services, Spring Batch, Cassandra, MongoDB, and Web Application Design and Architecture. He is currently working as a technology manager at a leading product and web development company. He worked as a developer and tech lead at the Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd and was the first developer in his previous company, Paytm. Dinesh is passionate about the latest Java technologies and loves to write technical blogs related to it. He is a very active member of the Java and Spring community on different forums. When it comes to the Spring Framework and Java, Dinesh tops the list!

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