Starting with Scala version 2.9 there exists a handy converter to convert from java.util.List and other collections to Scala's data structures by writing something like this:
import scala.collection.JavaConverters._
def scalaVersion = callJavaMethod.asScala
This is a lovely little feature, as it allows one to exploit the advantages of Scala when interacting with existing Java code.
However, I am uncertain about the involved time and space complexity and could not find anything in the official documentation, hence, the following question:
Where can I get information on the complexity (time and space) of the JavaConverters?
Various JavaConverters classes are using Adapter pattern to wrap original Java collection (underlying) and provide Scala interface. Thus both converting and accessing converted collections is constant in time (O(1)) introducing only minor overhead.
For instance this is the full source code of JListWrapper:
case class JListWrapper[A](val underlying : java.util.List[A]) extends mutable.Buffer[A] {
def length = underlying.size
override def isEmpty = underlying.isEmpty
override def iterator : Iterator[A] = underlying.iterator
def apply(i : Int) = underlying.get(i)
def update(i : Int, elem : A) = underlying.set(i, elem)
def +=:(elem : A) = { underlying.subList(0, 0).add(elem) ; this }
def +=(elem : A): this.type = { underlying.add(elem); this }
def insertAll(i : Int, elems : Traversable[A]) = { val ins = underlying.subList(0, i) ; elems.seq.foreach(ins.add(_)) }
def remove(i : Int) = underlying.remove(i)
def clear = underlying.clear
def result = this
}
Also note that converting Java collection to Scala and then back to Java yields the original collection, not double-wrapper.
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