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Kyle Carter
Kyle Carter

Posted on • Updated on • Originally published at blog.scaledcode.com

Effective Java: Prefer for-each loops to traditional for loops

A core part of many programs is iterating over groups of items. Java provides us many mechanisms for performing this iteration. We have options like while loops, for loops, Streams, for-each loops, etc. Different mechanisms are better suited to different usages. This particular chapter is encouraging us to prefer for-each loops over the more traditional loops. Before we get into what for-each loops can provide for us let's look at some example of the alternatives.

One example of looping over a Collection would be:

for(Iterator<Element> iterator = collection.getIteator(); iterator.hasNext();) {
  Element element = iterator.next();
  // Do something with element
}
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or with an array

for(int i=0; i<array.length; i++) {
  Element element = array[i];
  // Do something with element.
}
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The above definitely works but there are a number of details in order for the iteration to work. This leads to clutter as well potential for mistakes.

Let's look at an example with a bug and see if you can spot it:

enum Suit {CLUB, DIAMOND, HEART, SPADE }
enum Rank { ACE, DEUCE, THREE, FOUR, FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT, NINE, TEN, JACK, QUEEN, KING }

static Collection<Suit> suits = Arrays.asList(Suit.values());
static Collection<Rank> ranks = Arrays.asList(Rank.values());

List<Card> deck = new ArrayList<>();
for (Iterator<Suit> i = suits.iterator(); i.hasNext(); )
  for (Iterator<Rank> j = ranks.iterator(); j.hasNext(); )
    deck.add(new Card(i.next(), j.next());
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The bug above ends up being rather subtle. The problem is that we should be calling next() on i outside the inner loop as we are currently iterating through that collection too quickly and skipping elements. This will likely lead to a NoSuchElementException but in rather unfortunate cases where the outside collection is a multiple of the inside we would get no errors but the code wouldn't be doing what we want.

Now let's look at changing the above to use a for-each loop:

enum Suit {CLUB, DIAMOND, HEART, SPADE }
enum Rank { ACE, DEUCE, THREE, FOUR, FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT, NINE, TEN, JACK, QUEEN, KING }

static Collection<Suit> suits = Arrays.asList(Suit.values());
static Collection<Rank> ranks = Arrays.asList(Rank.values());

List<Card> deck = new ArrayList<>();
for (Suit suit : suits)
  for (Rank rank : ranks )
    deck.add(new Card(rank, suit);
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The above ends up being much cleaner as well as much less error prone.

All this being said, lets consider times when we can't use for-each loops:

  • Destructive Filtering - If you will be changing the collection as you iterate through it you will need to use a raw iterator.
  • Transforming If you need to replace some or all the values you can also not use a for-each loop.
  • Parallel Iteration If we need to traverse multiple collections at the same time we will need more control than a foreach loop can give us.

Although there are a number of situations where we can't use for-each loops these are usually the exception and our "run of the mill loop" is a great opportunity for the use of a for-each loop. Because of the advantages, being, readability, safety, and flexibility it is encouraged to use for-each loops whenever possible.

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