Value comparisons (as distinct from variable pointer equality)
Value comparisons (as distinct from variable pointer equality)
Return the index at which value i should be inserted in order to maintain sorted order.
Return the index at which value i should be inserted in order to maintain sorted order. This assumes that the existing elements already already sorted. If value i is already present, return its index.
Return the index containing the value i, or -1 if i is not found.
Return the index containing the value i, or -1 if i is not found.
Return the index containing the value i, or -1 if i is not found.
Return the index containing the value i, or -1 if i is not found. Do so more efficiently by assuming that the contents are sorted in ascending order. Look by starting near the last index as which a search was successful.
Contains indices of the sequence positions which immediately follow breaks (e.
Contains indices of the sequence positions which immediately follow breaks (e.g. removed stopwords)
Read from the BufferedReader, filling the document with words and Z assignments, but allow map function to alter the Z assignment, and skips word/z pairs for which the map function returns a value less than 0.
Read from the BufferedReader, filling the document with words and Z assignments, but allow map function to alter the Z assignment, and skips word/z pairs for which the map function returns a value less than 0.
(Changed in version 2.9.0) The behavior of scanRight
has changed. The previous behavior can be reproduced with scanRight.reverse.
Assign a new value to this variable
Assign a new value to this variable
(Changed in version 2.9.0) transpose
throws an IllegalArgumentException
if collections are not uniformly sized.
Abstract method to return the value of this variable.
Abstract method to return the value of this variable.
(Since version 2.10.0) use fold instead