Found 7442 Articles for Java

LocalDateTime equals() method in Java

karthikeya Boyini
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

173 Views

The equality of two LocalDateTime objects can be determined using the equals() method in the LocalDateTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the LocalDateTime object to be compared. Also it returns true if both the LocalDateTime objects are equal and false otherwise.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Main {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalDateTime ldt1 = LocalDateTime.parse("2019-02-18T23:15:30");       LocalDateTime ldt2 = LocalDateTime.parse("2019-02-18T23:15:30");       System.out.println("The LocalDateTime ldt1 is: " + ldt1);       System.out.println("The LocalDateTime ldt2 is: " ... Read More

LocalDateTime withNano() method in Java

Samual Sam
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

293 Views

An immutable copy of a LocalDateTime with the nanoseconds altered as required is done using the method withNano() in the LocalDateTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the nanosecond that is to be set in the LocalDateTime and it returns the LocalDateTime with the nanosecond altered as required.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Main {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalDateTime ldt1 = LocalDateTime.parse("2019-02-18T23:15:30");       System.out.println("The LocalDateTime is: " + ldt1);       LocalDateTime ldt2 = ldt1.withNano(5);       ... Read More

LocalDateTime plusWeeks() method in Java

karthikeya Boyini
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

109 Views

An immutable copy of a LocalDateTime object where some weeks are added to it can be obtained using the plusWeeks() method in the LocalDateTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the number of weeks to be added and it returns the LocalDateTime object with the added weeks.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalDateTime ldt = LocalDateTime.now();       System.out.println("The current LocalDateTime is: " + ldt);       System.out.println("The LocalDateTime with 4 weeks added is: ... Read More

LocalTime minusSeconds() method in Java

Samual Sam
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

82 Views

An immutable copy of a LocalTime object where some seconds are subtracted from it can be obtained using the minusSeconds() method in the LocalTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the number of seconds to be subtracted and it returns the LocalTime object with the subtracted seconds.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalTime lt = LocalTime.now();       System.out.println("The current LocalTime is: " + lt);       System.out.println("The LocalTime with 5 seconds subtracted is: ... Read More

LocalTime plusHours() method in Java

karthikeya Boyini
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

76 Views

An immutable copy of a LocalTime object where some hours are added to it can be obtained using the plusHours() method in the LocalTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the number of hours to be added and it returns the LocalTime object with the added hours.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalTime lt = LocalTime.now();       System.out.println("The current LocalTime is: " + lt);       System.out.println("The LocalTime with 3 hours added is: ... Read More

LocalTime plusNanos() method in Java

Samual Sam
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

110 Views

An immutable copy of a LocalTime object where some nanoseconds are added to it can be obtained using the plusNanos() method in the LocalTime class in Java. This method requires a single parameter i.e. the number of nanoseconds to be added and it returns the LocalTime object with the added nanoseconds.A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −Example Live Demoimport java.time.*; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LocalTime lt = LocalTime.now();       System.out.println("The current LocalTime is: " + lt);       System.out.println("The LocalTime with 1000 nanoseconds added is: ... Read More

Collectors minBy() method in Java 8

George John
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

494 Views

The minBy() method of the Collectors class in Java 8 returns a Collector that produces the minimum element according to a given Comparator, described as an OptionalThe syntax is as followsstatic Collector

LongStream mapToInt() method in Java

Chandu yadav
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

991 Views

The mapToInt() method returns an IntStream consisting of the results of applying the given function to the elements of this stream.The syntax is as followsmapToInt(LongToIntFunction mapper)Here, the parameter mapper is the stateless function applied to each element.Declare LongStream and add some elementsLongStream longStream = LongStream.of(1000L, 13000L, 18000L);Now, use the IntStream and mapToInt()IntStream intStream = longStream.mapToInt(val -> (int) val);The following is an example to implement LongStream mapToInt() in JavaExample Live Demoimport java.util.*; import java.util.stream.IntStream; import java.util.stream.LongStream; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       LongStream longStream = LongStream.of(1000L, 13000L, 18000L);       IntStream intStream = ... Read More

What is AbstractSequentialList class in Java?

Arjun Thakur
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

434 Views

The AbstractSequentialList class provides an implementation of the List interface. For an unmodifiable list, implement the list iterator's hasNext, next, hasPrevious, previous and index methods. For a modifiable list the programmer should implement the list iterator's set method.The syntax is as followspublic abstract class AbstractSequentialList extends AbstractListTo work with the AbstractSequentialList class in Java, you need to import the following packageimport java.util.AbstractSequentialList;First, create an AbstractSequentialList classAbstractSequentialList absSequential = new LinkedList();Now, add elementsabsSequential.add("Accessories"); absSequential.add("Home Decor"); absSequential.add("Books"); bsSequential.add("Stationery");Let us see an example to implement the AbstractSequentialList class in JavaExample Live Demoimport java.util.LinkedList; import java.util.AbstractSequentialList; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] ... Read More

The toString() method of Java AbstractCollection class

Ankith Reddy
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 22:30:25

329 Views

The toString() method of the AbstractCollection class is used to return the string representation of the elements of this collection.The syntax is as followspublic String toString()To work with AbstractCollection class in Java, import the following packageimport java.util.AbstractCollection;The following is an example to implement AbstractCollection toString() method in JavaExample Live Demoimport java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.AbstractCollection; public class Demo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       AbstractCollection absCollection = new ArrayList();       absCollection.add("HDD");       absCollection.add("Earphone");       absCollection.add("Headphone");       absCollection.add("Card Reader");       absCollection.add("SSD");       absCollection.add("Pen Drive");       ... Read More

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