High Performance Primitive Collections (HPPC) library provides typical data structures (lists, stacks, sets and maps) that are generated for all Java primitive types (byte, int, etc.) from a single template to conserve memory and boost performance.

Why HPPC?

The Java Collections package is in many ways excellent, but it cannot be used for primitive types without autoboxing (which kills the runtime performance due to increased memory use and garbage collector overhead).

This library has slightly different design goals than Java Collections (and many other collection packages). For example, the internals of each class are open and subject to free hacking and tuning up to one's wishes.

Why not other primitive collection libraries?

There are a few projects implementing collections over primitive types: fastutil, Koloboke, PCJ, GNU Trove, Apache Primitive Collections.

Historically, some of these libraries were released on commercially forbidding licenses (fastutil) and others appeared to be abandoned (PCJ), so HPPC was created to fill this gap. Since then things have changed quite a lot (fastutil is now Apache-licensed, Koloboke has been released), but HPPC still remains a small memory footprint and does the job. If you require full Java collections compliance, try fastutil, or Koloboke, they are both very, very good.

Assumptions and goals of HPPC

We assume that:

From these assumptions stem the following design drivers:

Design and implementation assumptions

Interfaces and their relation to Java Collections API

HPPC is not strictly modeled after Java Collections API, although we did try to make the APIs look similar enough for comfortable use. One particular thing largely missing in HPPC are "view" projections (sublists or views over the collection of keys or values). Certain classes provide such views (like {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectObjectHashMap ObjectObjectHashMap}), but for the most part, specific methods are provided that accept ranges or closure-like filters. If performance is still unsatisfactory, the internals of each class are available for direct manipulation.

Rough relationships between Java Collections classes and HPPC classes are presented in the table below.

Relationships between HPPC and Java Collections.
Java Collections HPPC (primitives) HPPC (generics)
bit sets java.util.BitSet BitSet n/a
array-backed lists java.util.ArrayList, java.util.Vector [type]ArrayList {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectArrayList ObjectArrayList<T>}
stacks java.util.Stack [type]Stack {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectStack ObjectStack<T>}
deques java.util.ArrayDeque [type]ArrayDeque {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectArrayDeque ObjectArrayDeque<T>}
hash sets java.util.HashSet [keyType]HashSet {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectHashSet ObjectHashSet<K>}
[keyType]HashSet
hash maps java.util.HashMap [keyType][valueType]HashMap {@linkplain com.carrotsearch.hppc.ObjectObjectHashMap ObjectObjectHashMap<K, V>}
[keyType]ObjectHashMap<V>
Object[valueType]HashMap<K>

The method-level API of the corresponding types is also similar, but distinct differences exist (consult the JavaDoc of each class).

Interfaces and container inheritance

HPPC's interfaces are modeled to encapsulate the common functionality enforced from all the classes that implement a given interface. The interface hierarchy is loosely inspired by STL.

An overview of interfaces and their relationship to data structures implemented in HPPC is depicted graphically below.

HPPC interfaces