I would like to get an answer pointing out the reasons why the following idea described below on a very simple example is commonly considered bad and know its weaknesses.
I have a sentence of words and my goal is to make every second one to uppercase. My starting point for both of the cases is exactly the same:
String sentence = "Hi, this is just a simple short sentence";
String[] split = sentence.split(" ");
The traditional and procedural approach is:
StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();
for (int i=0; i<split.length; i++) {
if (i%2==0) {
stringBuilder.append(split[i]);
} else {
stringBuilder.append(split[i].toUpperCase());
}
if (i<split.length-1) { stringBuilder.append(" "); }
}
When want to use java-stream the use is limited due the effectively-final or final variable constraint used in the lambda expression. I have to use the workaround using the array and its first and only index, which was suggested in the first comment of my question How to increment a value in Java Stream. Here is the example:
int index[] = {0};
String result = Arrays.stream(split)
.map(i -> index[0]++%2==0 ? i : i.toUpperCase())
.collect(Collectors.joining(" "));
Yeah, it's a bad solution and I have heard few good reasons somewhere hidden in comments of a question I am unable to find (if you remind me some of them, I'd upvote twice if possible). But what if I use AtomicInteger
- does it make any difference and is it a good and safe way with no side effects compared to the previous one?
AtomicInteger atom = new AtomicInteger(0);
String result = Arrays.stream(split)
.map(i -> atom.getAndIncrement()%2==0 ? i : i.toUpperCase())
.collect(Collectors.joining(" "));
Regardless of how ugly it might look for anyone, I ask for the description of possible weaknesses and their reasons. I don't care the performance but the design and possible weaknesses of the 2nd solution.
Please, don't match AtomicInteger with multi-threading issue. I used this class since it receives, increments and stores the value in the way I need for this example.
As I often say in my answers that "Java Stream-API" is not the bullet for everything. My goal is to explore and find the edge where is this sentence applicable since I find the last snippet quite clear, readable and brief compared to StringBuilder
's snippet.
Edit: Does exist any alternative way applicable for the snippets above and all the issues when it’s needed to work with both item and index while iteration using Stream-API?
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