Module java.base
Package java.util

Interface SequencedCollection<E>

Type Parameters:
E - the type of elements in this collection
All Superinterfaces:
Collection<E>, Iterable<E>
All Known Subinterfaces:
BlockingDeque<E>, ClassPrinter.ListNodePREVIEW, Deque<E>, List<E>, NavigableSet<E>, SequencedSet<E>, SortedSet<E>
All Known Implementing Classes:
AbstractList, AbstractSequentialList, ArrayDeque, ArrayList, AttributeList, ConcurrentLinkedDeque, ConcurrentSkipListSet, CopyOnWriteArrayList, LinkedBlockingDeque, LinkedHashSet, LinkedList, RoleList, RoleUnresolvedList, Stack, TreeSet, Vector

public interface SequencedCollection<E> extends Collection<E>
A collection that has a well-defined encounter order, that supports operations at both ends, and that is reversible. The elements of a sequenced collection have an encounter order, where conceptually the elements have a linear arrangement from the first element to the last element. Given any two elements, one element is either before (closer to the first element) or after (closer to the last element) the other element.

(Note that this definition does not imply anything about physical positioning of elements, such as their locations in a computer's memory.)

Several methods inherited from the Collection interface are required to operate on elements according to this collection's encounter order. For instance, the iterator method provides elements starting from the first element, proceeding through successive elements, until the last element. Other methods that are required to operate on elements in encounter order include the following: forEach, parallelStream, spliterator, stream, and all overloads of the toArray method.

This interface provides methods to add, retrieve, and remove elements at either end of the collection.

This interface also defines the reversed method, which provides a reverse-ordered view of this collection. In the reverse-ordered view, the concepts of first and last are inverted, as are the concepts of successor and predecessor. The first element of this collection is the last element of the reverse-ordered view, and vice-versa. The successor of some element in this collection is its predecessor in the reversed view, and vice-versa. All methods that respect the encounter order of the collection operate as if the encounter order is inverted. For instance, the Collection.iterator() method of the reversed view reports the elements in order from the last element of this collection to the first. The availability of the reversed method, and its impact on the ordering semantics of all applicable methods, allow convenient iteration, searching, copying, and streaming of the elements of this collection in either forward order or reverse order.

This class is a member of the Java Collections Framework.

API Note:
This interface does not impose any requirements on the equals and hashCode methods, because requirements imposed by sub-interfaces List and SequencedSet (which inherits requirements from Set) would be in conflict. See the specifications for Collection.equals and Collection.hashCode for further information.
Since:
21