Tutorial

Comparable and Comparator in Java Example

Published on August 3, 2022
author

Pankaj

Comparable and Comparator in Java Example

Comparable and Comparator in Java are very useful for sorting the collection of objects. Java provides some inbuilt methods to sort primitive types array or Wrapper classes array or list. Here we will first learn how we can sort an array/list of primitive types and wrapper classes and then we will use java.lang.Comparable and java.util.Comparator interfaces to sort array/list of custom classes. Let’s see how we can sort primitive types or Object array and list with a simple program.

package com.journaldev.sort;

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.List;

public class JavaObjectSorting {

    /**
     * This class shows how to sort primitive arrays, 
     * Wrapper classes Object Arrays
     * @param args
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        //sort primitives array like int array
        int[] intArr = {5,9,1,10};
        Arrays.sort(intArr);
        System.out.println(Arrays.toString(intArr));
        
        //sorting String array
        String[] strArr = {"A", "C", "B", "Z", "E"};
        Arrays.sort(strArr);
        System.out.println(Arrays.toString(strArr));
        
        //sorting list of objects of Wrapper classes
        List<String> strList = new ArrayList<String>();
        strList.add("A");
        strList.add("C");
        strList.add("B");
        strList.add("Z");
        strList.add("E");
        Collections.sort(strList);
        for(String str: strList) System.out.print(" "+str);
    }
}

Output of the above program is:

[1, 5, 9, 10]
[A, B, C, E, Z]
 A B C E Z

Now let’s try to sort an array of objects.

package com.journaldev.sort;

public class Employee {

    private int id;
    private String name;
    private int age;
    private long salary;

    public int getId() {
        return id;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    public int getAge() {
        return age;
    }

    public long getSalary() {
        return salary;
    }

    public Employee(int id, String name, int age, int salary) {
        this.id = id;
        this.name = name;
        this.age = age;
        this.salary = salary;
    }

    @Override
    //this is overridden to print the user-friendly information about the Employee
    public String toString() {
        return "[id=" + this.id + ", name=" + this.name + ", age=" + this.age + ", salary=" +
                this.salary + "]";
    }

}

Here is the code I used to sort the array of Employee objects.

//sorting object array
Employee[] empArr = new Employee[4];
empArr[0] = new Employee(10, "Mikey", 25, 10000);
empArr[1] = new Employee(20, "Arun", 29, 20000);
empArr[2] = new Employee(5, "Lisa", 35, 5000);
empArr[3] = new Employee(1, "Pankaj", 32, 50000);

//sorting employees array using Comparable interface implementation
Arrays.sort(empArr);
System.out.println("Default Sorting of Employees list:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));

When I tried to run this, it throws the following runtime exception.

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.ClassCastException: com.journaldev.sort.Employee cannot be cast to java.lang.Comparable
	at java.util.ComparableTimSort.countRunAndMakeAscending(ComparableTimSort.java:290)
	at java.util.ComparableTimSort.sort(ComparableTimSort.java:157)
	at java.util.ComparableTimSort.sort(ComparableTimSort.java:146)
	at java.util.Arrays.sort(Arrays.java:472)
	at com.journaldev.sort.JavaSorting.main(JavaSorting.java:41)

Comparable and Comparator

comparable and comparator, comparable vs comparator, comparable and comparator in java Java provides Comparable interface which should be implemented by any custom class if we want to use Arrays or Collections sorting methods. The Comparable interface has compareTo(T obj) method which is used by sorting methods, you can check any Wrapper, String or Date class to confirm this. We should override this method in such a way that it returns a negative integer, zero, or a positive integer if “this” object is less than, equal to, or greater than the object passed as an argument. After implementing Comparable interface in Employee class, here is the resulting Employee class.

package com.journaldev.sort;

import java.util.Comparator;

public class Employee implements Comparable<Employee> {

    private int id;
    private String name;
    private int age;
    private long salary;

    public int getId() {
        return id;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    public int getAge() {
        return age;
    }

    public long getSalary() {
        return salary;
    }

    public Employee(int id, String name, int age, int salary) {
        this.id = id;
        this.name = name;
        this.age = age;
        this.salary = salary;
    }

    @Override
    public int compareTo(Employee emp) {
        //let's sort the employee based on an id in ascending order
        //returns a negative integer, zero, or a positive integer as this employee id
        //is less than, equal to, or greater than the specified object.
        return (this.id - emp.id);
    }

    @Override
    //this is required to print the user-friendly information about the Employee
    public String toString() {
        return "[id=" + this.id + ", name=" + this.name + ", age=" + this.age + ", salary=" +
                this.salary + "]";
    }

}

Now when we execute the above snippet for Arrays sorting of Employees and print it, here is the output.

Default Sorting of Employees list:
[[id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000]]

As you can see that Employees array is sorted by id in ascending order. But, in most real-life scenarios, we want sorting based on different parameters. For example, as a CEO, I would like to sort the employees based on Salary, an HR would like to sort them based on age. This is the situation where we need to use Java Comparator interface because Comparable.compareTo(Object o) method implementation can provide default sorting and we can’t change it dynamically. Whereas with Comparator, we can define multiple methods with different ways of sorting and then chose the sorting method based on our requirements.

Java Comparator

Comparator interface compare(Object o1, Object o2) method need to be implemented that takes two Object argument, it should be implemented in such a way that it returns negative int if the first argument is less than the second one and returns zero if they are equal and positive int if the first argument is greater than the second one. Comparable and Comparator interfaces use Generics for compile-time type checking, learn more about Java Generics. Here is how we can create different Comparator implementation in the Employee class.

/**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Salary
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> SalaryComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return (int) (e1.getSalary() - e2.getSalary());
        }
    };

    /**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Age
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> AgeComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return e1.getAge() - e2.getAge();
        }
    };

    /**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Name
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> NameComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return e1.getName().compareTo(e2.getName());
        }
    };

All the above implementations of Comparator interface are anonymous classes. We can use these comparators to pass an argument to sort function of Arrays and Collections classes.

//sort employees array using Comparator by Salary
Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.SalaryComparator);
System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Salary:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));

//sort employees array using Comparator by Age
Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.AgeComparator);
System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Age:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));

//sort employees array using Comparator by Name
Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.NameComparator);
System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Name:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));

Here is the output of the above code snippet:

Employees list sorted by Salary:
[[id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000]]
Employees list sorted by Age:
[[id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000]]
Employees list sorted by Name:
[[id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000]]

So now we know that if we want to sort java object array or list, we need to implement java Comparable interface to provide default sorting and we should implement java Comparator interface to provide different ways of sorting. We can also create separate class that implements Comparator interface and then use it. Here is the final classes we have explaining Comparable and Comparator in Java.

package com.journaldev.sort;

import java.util.Comparator;

public class Employee implements Comparable<Employee> {

    private int id;
    private String name;
    private int age;
    private long salary;

    public int getId() {
        return id;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    public int getAge() {
        return age;
    }

    public long getSalary() {
        return salary;
    }

    public Employee(int id, String name, int age, int salary) {
        this.id = id;
        this.name = name;
        this.age = age;
        this.salary = salary;
    }

    @Override
    public int compareTo(Employee emp) {
        //let's sort the employee based on an id in ascending order
        //returns a negative integer, zero, or a positive integer as this employee id
        //is less than, equal to, or greater than the specified object.
        return (this.id - emp.id);
    }

    @Override
    //this is required to print the user-friendly information about the Employee
    public String toString() {
        return "[id=" + this.id + ", name=" + this.name + ", age=" + this.age + ", salary=" +
                this.salary + "]";
    }

    /**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Salary
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> SalaryComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return (int) (e1.getSalary() - e2.getSalary());
        }
    };

    /**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Age
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> AgeComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return e1.getAge() - e2.getAge();
        }
    };

    /**
     * Comparator to sort employees list or array in order of Name
     */
    public static Comparator<Employee> NameComparator = new Comparator<Employee>() {

        @Override
        public int compare(Employee e1, Employee e2) {
            return e1.getName().compareTo(e2.getName());
        }
    };
}

Here is the separate class implementation of Comparator interface that will compare two Employees object first on their id and if they are same then on the name.

package com.journaldev.sort;

import java.util.Comparator;

public class EmployeeComparatorByIdAndName implements Comparator<Employee> {

    @Override
    public int compare(Employee o1, Employee o2) {
        int flag = o1.getId() - o2.getId();
        if(flag==0) flag = o1.getName().compareTo(o2.getName());
        return flag;
    }

}

Here is the test class where we are using different ways to sort Objects in java using Comparable and Comparator.

package com.journaldev.sort;

import java.util.Arrays;

public class JavaObjectSorting {

    /**
     * This class shows how to sort custom objects array/list
     * implementing Comparable and Comparator interfaces
     * @param args
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        //sorting custom object array
        Employee[] empArr = new Employee[4];
        empArr[0] = new Employee(10, "Mikey", 25, 10000);
        empArr[1] = new Employee(20, "Arun", 29, 20000);
        empArr[2] = new Employee(5, "Lisa", 35, 5000);
        empArr[3] = new Employee(1, "Pankaj", 32, 50000);
        
        //sorting employees array using Comparable interface implementation
        Arrays.sort(empArr);
        System.out.println("Default Sorting of Employees list:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));
        
        //sort employees array using Comparator by Salary
        Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.SalaryComparator);
        System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Salary:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));
        
        //sort employees array using Comparator by Age
        Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.AgeComparator);
        System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Age:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));
        
        //sort employees array using Comparator by Name
        Arrays.sort(empArr, Employee.NameComparator);
        System.out.println("Employees list sorted by Name:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));
        
        //Employees list sorted by ID and then name using Comparator class
        empArr[0] = new Employee(1, "Mikey", 25, 10000);
        Arrays.sort(empArr, new EmployeeComparatorByIdAndName());
        System.out.println("Employees list sorted by ID and Name:\n"+Arrays.toString(empArr));
    }

}

Here is the output of the above program:

Default Sorting of Employees list:
[[id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000]]
Employees list sorted by Salary:
[[id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000]]
Employees list sorted by Age:
[[id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000]]
Employees list sorted by Name:
[[id=20, name=Arun, age=29, salary=20000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000]]
Employees list sorted by ID and Name:
[[id=1, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000], [id=1, name=Pankaj, age=32, salary=50000], [id=5, name=Lisa, age=35, salary=5000], [id=10, name=Mikey, age=25, salary=10000]]

The java.lang.Comparable and java.util.Comparator are powerful interfaces that can be used to provide sorting objects in java.

Comparable vs Comparator

  1. Comparable interface can be used to provide single way of sorting whereas Comparator interface is used to provide different ways of sorting.
  2. For using Comparable, Class needs to implement it whereas for using Comparator we don’t need to make any change in the class.
  3. Comparable interface is in java.lang package whereas Comparator interface is present in java.util package.
  4. We don’t need to make any code changes at client side for using Comparable, Arrays.sort() or Collection.sort() methods automatically uses the compareTo() method of the class. For Comparator, client needs to provide the Comparator class to use in compare() method.

Do you know that Collections.sort() method that takes Comparator argument follows Strategy Pattern?

You can checkout complete code and more core java examples from our GitHub Repository.

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About the authors
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Pankaj

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JournalDev
DigitalOcean Employee
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February 6, 2013

very nicely written.

- Roshan

    JournalDev
    DigitalOcean Employee
    DigitalOcean Employee badge
    May 20, 2013

    private int id; private String name; private int age; private long salar y; Kids kids; like kids i have reference in kids class also i have 2 parameters age,nofkids like i need sorting salary accending and kids age desending please any one can clarify…

    - Nagesh kaniganti

      JournalDev
      DigitalOcean Employee
      DigitalOcean Employee badge
      August 10, 2013

      Hi, nice explanation with the programs…but you didn’t print the strArray in the second Sysout statement at the first program. you can change it from intArr to strArr. Thanks …

      - Muralidhar N

        JournalDev
        DigitalOcean Employee
        DigitalOcean Employee badge
        September 24, 2013

        This must be an easy question for you guys. But can you please provide me the explanation of the following statetment. “return e1.getName().compareTo(e2.getName())”. Below are my specific queries: 1. Do we need to override comapreTo method even if we are implementing Comaparator and want to sort on the bases of name. 2. In the above mentioned example you have provided definition to comapreTo() in which you are sorting on the basis of ID. But then while sorting according to name you are still calling the comapreTo() method. Please explain as it is very confusing. Thanks

        - Sandy

          JournalDev
          DigitalOcean Employee
          DigitalOcean Employee badge
          November 8, 2013

          class A9 { String name,state; java.util.Date date; int age; A9(String name,java.util.Date date,int age) { this.name=name; this.date=date; this.age=age; My question is that how to sort the date using comparator and what should be the format of date,

          - kamaljit

            JournalDev
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            November 13, 2013

            How to sort String objects in arraylist using compartor and comparable?

            - Raj

              JournalDev
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              February 9, 2014

              cleared concept…Amazing work SiR thnxx :)

              - prateek

                JournalDev
                DigitalOcean Employee
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                February 23, 2014

                Sir,your concept is pure real to focus in an core and deep point of view.We got lot of depth concept by through it thanks.

                - Manash Ranjan Dakua

                  JournalDev
                  DigitalOcean Employee
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                  May 1, 2014

                  write a comparator class to define customized sorting which is alphabetical order of employee name if two employee having same name consider descending order of there age.

                  - Yogesh Pal

                    JournalDev
                    DigitalOcean Employee
                    DigitalOcean Employee badge
                    May 9, 2014

                    Supurb!!! I clearly understand custom objects sorting by this article

                    - indu

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