The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8.Java教程是为JDK 8编写的。Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.本页中描述的示例和实践没有利用后续版本中引入的改进,并且可能使用不再可用的技术。See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.有关Java SE 9及其后续版本中更新的语言特性的摘要,请参阅Java语言更改。
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.有关所有JDK版本的新功能、增强功能以及已删除或不推荐的选项的信息,请参阅JDK发行说明。
A SortedMap is a Map that maintains its entries in ascending order, sorted according to the keys' natural ordering, or according to a Comparator provided at the time of the SortedMap creation. Natural ordering and Comparators are discussed in the Object Ordering section. The SortedMap interface provides operations for normal Map operations and for the following:
Range view performs arbitrary range operations on the sorted mapEndpoints returns the first or the last key in the sorted mapComparator access returns the Comparator, if any, used to sort the mapThe following interface is the Map analog of SortedSet.
public interface SortedMap<K, V> extends Map<K, V>{
Comparator<? super K> comparator();
SortedMap<K, V> subMap(K fromKey, K toKey);
SortedMap<K, V> headMap(K toKey);
SortedMap<K, V> tailMap(K fromKey);
K firstKey();
K lastKey();
}The operations SortedMap inherits from Map behave identically on sorted maps and normal maps with two exceptions:
Iterator returned by the iterator operation on any of the sorted map's Collection views traverse the collections in order.Collection views' toArray operations contain the keys, values, or entries in order.Although it isn't guaranteed by the interface, the toString method of the Collection views in all the Java platform's SortedMap implementations returns a string containing all the elements of the view, in order.
By convention, all general-purpose Map implementations provide a standard conversion constructor that takes a Map; SortedMap implementations are no exception. In TreeMap, this constructor creates an instance that orders its entries according to their keys' natural ordering. This was probably a mistake. It would have been better to check dynamically to see whether the specified Map instance was a SortedMap and, if so, to sort the new map according to the same criterion (comparator or natural ordering). Because TreeMap took the approach it did, it also provides a constructor that takes a SortedMap and returns a new TreeMap containing the same mappings as the given SortedMap, sorted according to the same criterion. Note that it is the compile-time type of the argument, not its runtime type, that determines whether the SortedMap constructor is invoked in preference to the ordinary map constructor.
SortedMap implementations also provide, by convention, a constructor that takes a Comparator and returns an empty map sorted according to the specified Comparator. If null is passed to this constructor, it returns a Map that sorts its mappings according to their keys' natural ordering.
Because this interface is a precise Map analog of SortedSet, all the idioms and code examples in The SortedSet Interface section apply to SortedMap with only trivial modifications.