There are various options. Personally I like using Guava:
List<String> strings = Lists.newArrayList("s1", "s2", "s3");
(Guava's a library worth having anyway, of course :)
Using just the JDK, you could use:
List<String> strings = Arrays.asList("s1", "s2", "s3");
Note that this will return an ArrayList
, but that's not the normal java.util.ArrayList
- it's an internal one which is mutable but fixed-size.
Personally I prefer the Guava version as it makes it clear what's going on (the list implementation which will be returned). It's also still clear what's going on if you statically import the method:
// import static com.google.common.collect.Lists.newArrayList;
List<String> strings = newArrayList("s1", "s2", "s3");
... whereas if you statically import asList
it looks a little odder.
Another Guava option, if you don't want a modifiable-in-any-way list:
ImmutableList<String> strings = ImmutableList.of("s1", "s2", "s3");
I typically want to either have a completely mutable list (in which case Lists.newArrayList
is best) or a completely immutable list (in which case ImmutableList.of
is best). It's rare that I really want a mutable-but-fixed-size list.
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