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Results 1 - 4 of 4 for We (0.12 sec)

  1. android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/ImmutableSortedMap.java

              // We're careful to put only K instances in.
              K[] sortedKs = (K[]) sortedKeys;
              Arrays.sort(sortedKs, comparator);
              Object[] sortedValues = new Object[size];
    
              // We might, somehow, be able to reorder values in-place.  But it doesn't seem like
              // there's a way around creating the separate sortedKeys array, and if we're allocating
    Java
    - Registered: Fri May 03 12:43:13 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed May 01 18:44:57 GMT 2024
    - 53.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  2. android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/Sets.java

          // Warning: this is broken if size() == 0, so it is critical that we
          // substitute an empty ImmutableSet to the user in place of this
    
          // It's a weird formula, but tests prove it works.
          int adjust = size() - 1;
          for (int i = 0; i < axes.size(); i++) {
            adjust *= 31;
            adjust = ~~adjust;
            // in GWT, we have to deal with integer overflow carefully
          }
          int hash = 1;
    Java
    - Registered: Fri May 03 12:43:13 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed May 01 18:44:57 GMT 2024
    - 77.4K bytes
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  3. android/guava-tests/test/com/google/common/collect/IteratorsTest.java

        }
      }
    
      private static Iterator<Integer> iterateOver(int... values) {
        // Note: Ints.asList's iterator does not support remove which we need for testing.
        return new ArrayList<>(Ints.asList(values)).iterator();
      }
    
      public void testElementsEqual() {
        Iterable<?> a;
        Iterable<?> b;
    
        // Base case.
    Java
    - Registered: Fri May 03 12:43:13 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Tue Apr 30 18:43:01 GMT 2024
    - 56.5K bytes
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  4. android/guava/src/com/google/common/collect/Iterators.java

             * Don't store a new Iterator until we know the user can't remove() the last returned
             * element anymore. Otherwise, when we remove from the old iterator, we may be invalidating
             * the new one. The result is a ConcurrentModificationException or other bad behavior.
             *
             * (If we decide that we really, really hate allocating two Iterators per cycle instead of
    Java
    - Registered: Fri May 03 12:43:13 GMT 2024
    - Last Modified: Tue Apr 30 18:43:01 GMT 2024
    - 51.1K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
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