public class SizeSequence extends Object
SizeSequence object efficiently maintains an ordered list of sizes and corresponding positions. One situation for which
SizeSequence might be appropriate is in a component that displays multiple rows of unequal size. In this case, a single
SizeSequence object could be used to track the heights and Y positions of all rows.
Another example would be a multi-column component, such as a JTable, in which the column sizes are not all equal. The JTable might use a single SizeSequence object to store the widths and X positions of all the columns. The JTable could then use the SizeSequence object to find the column corresponding to a certain position. The JTable could update the SizeSequence object whenever one or more column sizes changed.
The following figure shows the relationship between size and position data for a multi-column component.
In the figure, the first index (0) corresponds to the first column, the second index (1) to the second column, and so on. The first column's position starts at 0, and the column occupies size0 pixels, where size0 is the value returned by getSize(0). Thus, the first column ends at size0 - 1. The second column then begins at the position size0 and occupies size1 (getSize(1)) pixels.
Note that a SizeSequence object simply represents intervals along an axis. In our examples, the intervals represent height or width in pixels. However, any other unit of measure (for example, time in days) could be just as valid.
getIndex(position) and
setSize(index, size). Whichever choice of internal format is made one of these operations is costly when the number of entries becomes large. If sizes are stored, finding the index of the entry that encloses a particular position is linear in the number of entries. If positions are stored instead, setting the size of an entry at a particular index requires updating the positions of the affected entries, which is also a linear calculation.
Like the above techniques this class holds an array of N integers internally but uses a hybrid encoding, which is halfway between the size-based and positional-based approaches. The result is a data structure that takes the same space to store the information but can perform most operations in Log(N) time instead of O(N), where N is the number of entries in the list.
Two operations that remain O(N) in the number of entries are the insertEntries and removeEntries methods, both of which are implemented by converting the internal array to a set of integer sizes, copying it into the new array, and then reforming the hybrid representation in place.
| Constructor and Description |
|---|
SizeSequence()
Creates a new
SizeSequence object that contains no entries.
|
SizeSequence(int numEntries)
Creates a new
SizeSequence object that contains the specified number of entries, all initialized to have size 0.
|
SizeSequence(int[] sizes)
Creates a new
SizeSequence object that contains the specified sizes.
|
SizeSequence(int numEntries, int value)
Creates a new
SizeSequence object that contains the specified number of entries, all initialized to have size
value.
|
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
int |
getIndex(int position)
Returns the index of the entry that corresponds to the specified position.
|
int |
getPosition(int index)
Returns the start position for the specified entry.
|
int |
getSize(int index)
Returns the size of the specified entry.
|
int[] |
getSizes()
Returns the size of all entries.
|
void |
insertEntries(int start, int length, int value)
Adds a contiguous group of entries to this
SizeSequence.
|
void |
removeEntries(int start, int length)
Removes a contiguous group of entries from this
SizeSequence.
|
void |
setSize(int index, int size)
Sets the size of the specified entry.
|
void |
setSizes(int[] sizes)
Resets this
SizeSequence object, using the data in the
sizes argument.
|
public SizeSequence()
SizeSequence object that contains no entries. To add entries, you can use
insertEntries or
setSizes.
insertEntries(int, int, int),
setSizes(int[])
public SizeSequence(int numEntries)
SizeSequence object that contains the specified number of entries, all initialized to have size 0.
numEntries - the number of sizes to track
NegativeArraySizeException - if
numEntries < 0
public SizeSequence(int numEntries,
int value)
SizeSequence object that contains the specified number of entries, all initialized to have size
value.
numEntries - the number of sizes to track
value - the initial value of each size
public SizeSequence(int[] sizes)
SizeSequence object that contains the specified sizes.
sizes - the array of sizes to be contained in the
SizeSequence
public void setSizes(int[] sizes)
SizeSequence object, using the data in the
sizes argument. This method reinitializes this object so that it contains as many entries as the
sizes array. Each entry's size is initialized to the value of the corresponding item in
sizes.
sizes - the array of sizes to be contained in this
SizeSequence
public int[] getSizes()
public int getPosition(int index)
getPosition(0) returns 0,
getPosition(1) is equal to
getSize(0),
getPosition(2) is equal to
getSize(0) +
getSize(1), and so on.
Note that if index is greater than length the value returned may be meaningless.
index - the index of the entry whose position is desired
public int getIndex(int position)
getIndex(0) is 0, since the first entry always starts at position 0.
position - the position of the entry
public int getSize(int index)
index is out of the range
(0 <= index < getSizes().length) the behavior is unspecified.
index - the index corresponding to the entry
public void setSize(int index,
int size)
index does not fall in the range:
(0 <= index < getSizes().length) the behavior is unspecified.
index - the index corresponding to the entry
size - the size of the entry
public void insertEntries(int start,
int length,
int value)
SizeSequence. Note that the values of
start and
length must satisfy the following conditions:
(0 <= start < getSizes().length) AND (length >= 0). If these conditions are not met, the behavior is unspecified and an exception may be thrown.
start - the index to be assigned to the first entry in the group
length - the number of entries in the group
value - the size to be assigned to each new entry
ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException - if the parameters are outside of the range: (
0 <= start < (getSizes().length)) AND (length >= 0)
public void removeEntries(int start,
int length)
SizeSequence. Note that the values of
start and
length must satisfy the following conditions:
(0 <= start < getSizes().length) AND (length >= 0). If these conditions are not met, the behavior is unspecified and an exception may be thrown.
start - the index of the first entry to be removed
length - the number of entries to be removed