T - the type of the stream elementspublic interface Stream<T> extends BaseStream<T,Stream<T>>
Stream and IntStream:
 
     int sum = widgets.stream()
                      .filter(w -> w.getColor() == RED)
                      .mapToInt(w -> w.getWeight())
                      .sum();
 widgets is a Collection<Widget>.  We create
 a stream of Widget objects via Collection.stream(),
 filter it to produce a stream containing only the red widgets, and then
 transform it into a stream of int values representing the weight of
 each red widget. Then this stream is summed to produce a total weight.
 In addition to Stream, which is a stream of object references,
 there are primitive specializations for IntStream, LongStream,
 and DoubleStream, all of which are referred to as "streams" and
 conform to the characteristics and restrictions described here.
 
To perform a computation, stream
 operations are composed into a
 stream pipeline.  A stream pipeline consists of a source (which
 might be an array, a collection, a generator function, an I/O channel,
 etc), zero or more intermediate operations (which transform a
 stream into another stream, such as filter(Predicate)), and a
 terminal operation (which produces a result or side-effect, such
 as count() or forEach(Consumer)).
 Streams are lazy; computation on the source data is only performed when the
 terminal operation is initiated, and source elements are consumed only
 as needed.
 
Collections and streams, while bearing some superficial similarities,
 have different goals.  Collections are primarily concerned with the efficient
 management of, and access to, their elements.  By contrast, streams do not
 provide a means to directly access or manipulate their elements, and are
 instead concerned with declaratively describing their source and the
 computational operations which will be performed in aggregate on that source.
 However, if the provided stream operations do not offer the desired
 functionality, the BaseStream.iterator() and BaseStream.spliterator() operations
 can be used to perform a controlled traversal.
 
A stream pipeline, like the "widgets" example above, can be viewed as
 a query on the stream source.  Unless the source was explicitly
 designed for concurrent modification (such as a ConcurrentHashMap),
 unpredictable or erroneous behavior may result from modifying the stream
 source while it is being queried.
 
Most stream operations accept parameters that describe user-specified
 behavior, such as the lambda expression w -> w.getWeight() passed to
 mapToInt in the example above.  To preserve correct behavior,
 these behavioral parameters:
 
Such parameters are always instances of a
 functional interface such
 as Function, and are often lambda expressions or
 method references.  Unless otherwise specified these parameters must be
 non-null.
 
A stream should be operated on (invoking an intermediate or terminal stream
 operation) only once.  This rules out, for example, "forked" streams, where
 the same source feeds two or more pipelines, or multiple traversals of the
 same stream.  A stream implementation may throw IllegalStateException
 if it detects that the stream is being reused. However, since some stream
 operations may return their receiver rather than a new stream object, it may
 not be possible to detect reuse in all cases.
 
Streams have a BaseStream.close() method and implement AutoCloseable,
 but nearly all stream instances do not actually need to be closed after use.
 Generally, only streams whose source is an IO channel (such as those returned
 by Files.lines(Path, Charset)) will require closing.  Most streams
 are backed by collections, arrays, or generating functions, which require no
 special resource management.  (If a stream does require closing, it can be
 declared as a resource in a try-with-resources statement.)
 
Stream pipelines may execute either sequentially or in
 parallel.  This
 execution mode is a property of the stream.  Streams are created
 with an initial choice of sequential or parallel execution.  (For example,
 Collection.stream() creates a sequential stream,
 and Collection.parallelStream() creates
 a parallel one.)  This choice of execution mode may be modified by the
 BaseStream.sequential() or BaseStream.parallel() methods, and may be queried with
 the BaseStream.isParallel() method.
IntStream, 
LongStream, 
DoubleStream, 
java.util.stream| Modifier and Type | Interface and Description | 
|---|---|
| static interface  | Stream.Builder<T>A mutable builder for a  Stream. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| boolean | allMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)Returns whether all elements of this stream match the provided predicate. | 
| boolean | anyMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)Returns whether any elements of this stream match the provided
 predicate. | 
| static <T> Stream.Builder<T> | builder()Returns a builder for a  Stream. | 
| <R,A> R | collect(Collector<? super T,A,R> collector)Performs a mutable
 reduction operation on the elements of this stream using a
  Collector. | 
| <R> R | collect(Supplier<R> supplier,
       BiConsumer<R,? super T> accumulator,
       BiConsumer<R,R> combiner)Performs a mutable
 reduction operation on the elements of this stream. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | concat(Stream<? extends T> a,
      Stream<? extends T> b)Creates a lazily concatenated stream whose elements are all the
 elements of the first stream followed by all the elements of the
 second stream. | 
| long | count()Returns the count of elements in this stream. | 
| Stream<T> | distinct()Returns a stream consisting of the distinct elements (according to
  Object.equals(Object)) of this stream. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | empty()Returns an empty sequential  Stream. | 
| Stream<T> | filter(Predicate<? super T> predicate)Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream that match
 the given predicate. | 
| Optional<T> | findAny()Returns an  Optionaldescribing some element of the stream, or an
 emptyOptionalif the stream is empty. | 
| Optional<T> | findFirst()Returns an  Optionaldescribing the first element of this stream,
 or an emptyOptionalif the stream is empty. | 
| <R> Stream<R> | flatMap(Function<? super T,? extends Stream<? extends R>> mapper)Returns a stream consisting of the results of replacing each element of
 this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by applying
 the provided mapping function to each element. | 
| DoubleStream | flatMapToDouble(Function<? super T,? extends DoubleStream> mapper)Returns an  DoubleStreamconsisting of the results of replacing
 each element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced
 by applying the provided mapping function to each element. | 
| IntStream | flatMapToInt(Function<? super T,? extends IntStream> mapper)Returns an  IntStreamconsisting of the results of replacing each
 element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
 applying the provided mapping function to each element. | 
| LongStream | flatMapToLong(Function<? super T,? extends LongStream> mapper)Returns an  LongStreamconsisting of the results of replacing each
 element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
 applying the provided mapping function to each element. | 
| void | forEach(Consumer<? super T> action)Performs an action for each element of this stream. | 
| void | forEachOrdered(Consumer<? super T> action)Performs an action for each element of this stream, in the encounter
 order of the stream if the stream has a defined encounter order. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | generate(Supplier<T> s)Returns an infinite sequential unordered stream where each element is
 generated by the provided  Supplier. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | iterate(T seed,
       UnaryOperator<T> f)Returns an infinite sequential ordered  Streamproduced by iterative
 application of a functionfto an initial elementseed,
 producing aStreamconsisting ofseed,f(seed),f(f(seed)), etc. | 
| Stream<T> | limit(long maxSize)Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, truncated
 to be no longer than  maxSizein length. | 
| <R> Stream<R> | map(Function<? super T,? extends R> mapper)Returns a stream consisting of the results of applying the given
 function to the elements of this stream. | 
| DoubleStream | mapToDouble(ToDoubleFunction<? super T> mapper)Returns a  DoubleStreamconsisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream. | 
| IntStream | mapToInt(ToIntFunction<? super T> mapper)Returns an  IntStreamconsisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream. | 
| LongStream | mapToLong(ToLongFunction<? super T> mapper)Returns a  LongStreamconsisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream. | 
| Optional<T> | max(Comparator<? super T> comparator)Returns the maximum element of this stream according to the provided
  Comparator. | 
| Optional<T> | min(Comparator<? super T> comparator)Returns the minimum element of this stream according to the provided
  Comparator. | 
| boolean | noneMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)Returns whether no elements of this stream match the provided predicate. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | of(T... values)Returns a sequential ordered stream whose elements are the specified values. | 
| static <T> Stream<T> | of(T t)Returns a sequential  Streamcontaining a single element. | 
| Stream<T> | peek(Consumer<? super T> action)Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, additionally
 performing the provided action on each element as elements are consumed
 from the resulting stream. | 
| Optional<T> | reduce(BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)Performs a reduction on the
 elements of this stream, using an
 associative accumulation
 function, and returns an  Optionaldescribing the reduced value,
 if any. | 
| T | reduce(T identity,
      BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)Performs a reduction on the
 elements of this stream, using the provided identity value and an
 associative
 accumulation function, and returns the reduced value. | 
| <U> U | reduce(U identity,
      BiFunction<U,? super T,U> accumulator,
      BinaryOperator<U> combiner)Performs a reduction on the
 elements of this stream, using the provided identity, accumulation and
 combining functions. | 
| Stream<T> | skip(long n)Returns a stream consisting of the remaining elements of this stream
 after discarding the first  nelements of the stream. | 
| Stream<T> | sorted()Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, sorted
 according to natural order. | 
| Stream<T> | sorted(Comparator<? super T> comparator)Returns a stream consisting of the elements of this stream, sorted
 according to the provided  Comparator. | 
| Object[] | toArray()Returns an array containing the elements of this stream. | 
| <A> A[] | toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator)Returns an array containing the elements of this stream, using the
 provided  generatorfunction to allocate the returned array, as
 well as any additional arrays that might be required for a partitioned
 execution or for resizing. | 
close, isParallel, iterator, onClose, parallel, sequential, spliterator, unorderedStream<T> filter(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
This is an intermediate operation.
predicate - a non-interfering,
                  stateless
                  predicate to apply to each element to determine if it
                  should be included<R> Stream<R> map(Function<? super T,? extends R> mapper)
This is an intermediate operation.
R - The element type of the new streammapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each elementIntStream mapToInt(ToIntFunction<? super T> mapper)
IntStream consisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream.
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each elementLongStream mapToLong(ToLongFunction<? super T> mapper)
LongStream consisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream.
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each elementDoubleStream mapToDouble(ToDoubleFunction<? super T> mapper)
DoubleStream consisting of the results of applying the
 given function to the elements of this stream.
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each element<R> Stream<R> flatMap(Function<? super T,? extends Stream<? extends R>> mapper)
closed after its contents
 have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is null
 an empty stream is used, instead.)
 This is an intermediate operation.
flatMap() operation has the effect of applying a one-to-many
 transformation to the elements of the stream, and then flattening the
 resulting elements into a new stream.
 Examples.
If orders is a stream of purchase orders, and each purchase
 order contains a collection of line items, then the following produces a
 stream containing all the line items in all the orders:
 
     orders.flatMap(order -> order.getLineItems().stream())...
 If path is the path to a file, then the following produces a
 stream of the words contained in that file:
 
     Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(path, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
     Stream<String> words = lines.flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(" +")));
 mapper function passed to flatMap splits a line,
 using a simple regular expression, into an array of words, and then
 creates a stream of words from that array.R - The element type of the new streammapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
               of new valuesIntStream flatMapToInt(Function<? super T,? extends IntStream> mapper)
IntStream consisting of the results of replacing each
 element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
 applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
 stream is closed after its
 contents have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
 null an empty stream is used, instead.)
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
               of new valuesflatMap(Function)LongStream flatMapToLong(Function<? super T,? extends LongStream> mapper)
LongStream consisting of the results of replacing each
 element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced by
 applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
 stream is closed after its
 contents have been placed into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
 null an empty stream is used, instead.)
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
               of new valuesflatMap(Function)DoubleStream flatMapToDouble(Function<? super T,? extends DoubleStream> mapper)
DoubleStream consisting of the results of replacing
 each element of this stream with the contents of a mapped stream produced
 by applying the provided mapping function to each element.  Each mapped
 stream is closed after its
 contents have placed been into this stream.  (If a mapped stream is
 null an empty stream is used, instead.)
 This is an intermediate operation.
mapper - a non-interfering,
               stateless
               function to apply to each element which produces a stream
               of new valuesflatMap(Function)Stream<T> distinct()
Object.equals(Object)) of this stream.
 For ordered streams, the selection of distinct elements is stable (for duplicated elements, the element appearing first in the encounter order is preserved.) For unordered streams, no stability guarantees are made.
This is a stateful intermediate operation.
distinct() in parallel pipelines is
 relatively expensive (requires that the operation act as a full barrier,
 with substantial buffering overhead), and stability is often not needed.
 Using an unordered stream source (such as generate(Supplier))
 or removing the ordering constraint with BaseStream.unordered() may result
 in significantly more efficient execution for distinct() in parallel
 pipelines, if the semantics of your situation permit.  If consistency
 with encounter order is required, and you are experiencing poor performance
 or memory utilization with distinct() in parallel pipelines,
 switching to sequential execution with BaseStream.sequential() may improve
 performance.Stream<T> sorted()
Comparable, a java.lang.ClassCastException may be thrown
 when the terminal operation is executed.
 For ordered streams, the sort is stable. For unordered streams, no stability guarantees are made.
This is a stateful intermediate operation.
Stream<T> sorted(Comparator<? super T> comparator)
Comparator.
 For ordered streams, the sort is stable. For unordered streams, no stability guarantees are made.
This is a stateful intermediate operation.
comparator - a non-interfering,
                   stateless
                   Comparator to be used to compare stream elementsStream<T> peek(Consumer<? super T> action)
This is an intermediate operation.
For parallel stream pipelines, the action may be called at whatever time and in whatever thread the element is made available by the upstream operation. If the action modifies shared state, it is responsible for providing the required synchronization.
     Stream.of("one", "two", "three", "four")
         .filter(e -> e.length() > 3)
         .peek(e -> System.out.println("Filtered value: " + e))
         .map(String::toUpperCase)
         .peek(e -> System.out.println("Mapped value: " + e))
         .collect(Collectors.toList());
 action - a 
                 non-interfering action to perform on the elements as
                 they are consumed from the streamStream<T> limit(long maxSize)
maxSize in length.
 limit() is generally a cheap operation on sequential
 stream pipelines, it can be quite expensive on ordered parallel pipelines,
 especially for large values of maxSize, since limit(n)
 is constrained to return not just any n elements, but the
 first n elements in the encounter order.  Using an unordered
 stream source (such as generate(Supplier)) or removing the
 ordering constraint with BaseStream.unordered() may result in significant
 speedups of limit() in parallel pipelines, if the semantics of
 your situation permit.  If consistency with encounter order is required,
 and you are experiencing poor performance or memory utilization with
 limit() in parallel pipelines, switching to sequential execution
 with BaseStream.sequential() may improve performance.maxSize - the number of elements the stream should be limited toIllegalArgumentException - if maxSize is negativeStream<T> skip(long n)
n elements of the stream.
 If this stream contains fewer than n elements then an
 empty stream will be returned.
 This is a stateful intermediate operation.
skip() is generally a cheap operation on sequential
 stream pipelines, it can be quite expensive on ordered parallel pipelines,
 especially for large values of n, since skip(n)
 is constrained to skip not just any n elements, but the
 first n elements in the encounter order.  Using an unordered
 stream source (such as generate(Supplier)) or removing the
 ordering constraint with BaseStream.unordered() may result in significant
 speedups of skip() in parallel pipelines, if the semantics of
 your situation permit.  If consistency with encounter order is required,
 and you are experiencing poor performance or memory utilization with
 skip() in parallel pipelines, switching to sequential execution
 with BaseStream.sequential() may improve performance.n - the number of leading elements to skipIllegalArgumentException - if n is negativevoid forEach(Consumer<? super T> action)
This is a terminal operation.
The behavior of this operation is explicitly nondeterministic. For parallel stream pipelines, this operation does not guarantee to respect the encounter order of the stream, as doing so would sacrifice the benefit of parallelism. For any given element, the action may be performed at whatever time and in whatever thread the library chooses. If the action accesses shared state, it is responsible for providing the required synchronization.
action - a 
               non-interfering action to perform on the elementsvoid forEachOrdered(Consumer<? super T> action)
This is a terminal operation.
This operation processes the elements one at a time, in encounter order if one exists. Performing the action for one element happens-before performing the action for subsequent elements, but for any given element, the action may be performed in whatever thread the library chooses.
action - a 
               non-interfering action to perform on the elementsforEach(Consumer)Object[] toArray()
This is a terminal operation.
<A> A[] toArray(IntFunction<A[]> generator)
generator function to allocate the returned array, as
 well as any additional arrays that might be required for a partitioned
 execution or for resizing.
 This is a terminal operation.
     Person[] men = people.stream()
                          .filter(p -> p.getGender() == MALE)
                          .toArray(Person[]::new);
 A - the element type of the resulting arraygenerator - a function which produces a new array of the desired
                  type and the provided lengthArrayStoreException - if the runtime type of the array returned
 from the array generator is not a supertype of the runtime type of every
 element in this streamT reduce(T identity, BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)
     T result = identity;
     for (T element : this stream)
         result = accumulator.apply(result, element)
     return result;
 The identity value must be an identity for the accumulator
 function. This means that for all t,
 accumulator.apply(identity, t) is equal to t.
 The accumulator function must be an
 associative function.
 
This is a terminal operation.
     Integer sum = integers.reduce(0, (a, b) -> a+b);
 
     Integer sum = integers.reduce(0, Integer::sum);
 While this may seem a more roundabout way to perform an aggregation compared to simply mutating a running total in a loop, reduction operations parallelize more gracefully, without needing additional synchronization and with greatly reduced risk of data races.
identity - the identity value for the accumulating functionaccumulator - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for combining two valuesOptional<T> reduce(BinaryOperator<T> accumulator)
Optional describing the reduced value,
 if any. This is equivalent to:
 
     boolean foundAny = false;
     T result = null;
     for (T element : this stream) {
         if (!foundAny) {
             foundAny = true;
             result = element;
         }
         else
             result = accumulator.apply(result, element);
     }
     return foundAny ? Optional.of(result) : Optional.empty();
 The accumulator function must be an
 associative function.
 
This is a terminal operation.
accumulator - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for combining two valuesOptional describing the result of the reductionNullPointerException - if the result of the reduction is nullreduce(Object, BinaryOperator), 
min(Comparator), 
max(Comparator)<U> U reduce(U identity,
             BiFunction<U,? super T,U> accumulator,
             BinaryOperator<U> combiner)
     U result = identity;
     for (T element : this stream)
         result = accumulator.apply(result, element)
     return result;
 The identity value must be an identity for the combiner
 function.  This means that for all u, combiner(identity, u)
 is equal to u.  Additionally, the combiner function
 must be compatible with the accumulator function; for all
 u and t, the following must hold:
 
     combiner.apply(u, accumulator.apply(identity, t)) == accumulator.apply(u, t)
 This is a terminal operation.
map and reduce operations.
 The accumulator function acts as a fused mapper and accumulator,
 which can sometimes be more efficient than separate mapping and reduction,
 such as when knowing the previously reduced value allows you to avoid
 some computation.U - The type of the resultidentity - the identity value for the combiner functionaccumulator - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for incorporating an additional element into a resultcombiner - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for combining two values, which must be
                    compatible with the accumulator functionreduce(BinaryOperator), 
reduce(Object, BinaryOperator)<R> R collect(Supplier<R> supplier, BiConsumer<R,? super T> accumulator, BiConsumer<R,R> combiner)
ArrayList, and elements are incorporated by updating
 the state of the result rather than by replacing the result.  This
 produces a result equivalent to:
 
     R result = supplier.get();
     for (T element : this stream)
         accumulator.accept(result, element);
     return result;
 Like reduce(Object, BinaryOperator), collect operations
 can be parallelized without requiring additional synchronization.
 
This is a terminal operation.
collect().
 For example, the following will accumulate strings into an ArrayList:
 
     List<String> asList = stringStream.collect(ArrayList::new, ArrayList::add,
                                                ArrayList::addAll);
 The following will take a stream of strings and concatenates them into a single string:
     String concat = stringStream.collect(StringBuilder::new, StringBuilder::append,
                                          StringBuilder::append)
                                 .toString();
 R - type of the resultsupplier - a function that creates a new result container. For a
                 parallel execution, this function may be called
                 multiple times and must return a fresh value each time.accumulator - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for incorporating an additional element into a resultcombiner - an associative,
                    non-interfering,
                    stateless
                    function for combining two values, which must be
                    compatible with the accumulator function<R,A> R collect(Collector<? super T,A,R> collector)
Collector.  A Collector
 encapsulates the functions used as arguments to
 collect(Supplier, BiConsumer, BiConsumer), allowing for reuse of
 collection strategies and composition of collect operations such as
 multiple-level grouping or partitioning.
 If the stream is parallel, and the Collector
 is concurrent, and
 either the stream is unordered or the collector is
 unordered,
 then a concurrent reduction will be performed (see Collector for
 details on concurrent reduction.)
 
This is a terminal operation.
When executed in parallel, multiple intermediate results may be
 instantiated, populated, and merged so as to maintain isolation of
 mutable data structures.  Therefore, even when executed in parallel
 with non-thread-safe data structures (such as ArrayList), no
 additional synchronization is needed for a parallel reduction.
     List<String> asList = stringStream.collect(Collectors.toList());
 The following will classify Person objects by city:
 
     Map<String, List<Person>> peopleByCity
         = personStream.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getCity));
 The following will classify Person objects by state and city,
 cascading two Collectors together:
 
     Map<String, Map<String, List<Person>>> peopleByStateAndCity
         = personStream.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getState,
                                                      Collectors.groupingBy(Person::getCity)));
 R - the type of the resultA - the intermediate accumulation type of the Collectorcollector - the Collector describing the reductioncollect(Supplier, BiConsumer, BiConsumer), 
CollectorsOptional<T> min(Comparator<? super T> comparator)
Comparator.  This is a special case of a
 reduction.
 This is a terminal operation.
comparator - a non-interfering,
                   stateless
                   Comparator to compare elements of this streamOptional describing the minimum element of this stream,
 or an empty Optional if the stream is emptyNullPointerException - if the minimum element is nullOptional<T> max(Comparator<? super T> comparator)
Comparator.  This is a special case of a
 reduction.
 This is a terminal operation.
comparator - a non-interfering,
                   stateless
                   Comparator to compare elements of this streamOptional describing the maximum element of this stream,
 or an empty Optional if the stream is emptyNullPointerException - if the maximum element is nulllong count()
     return mapToLong(e -> 1L).sum();
 This is a terminal operation.
boolean anyMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
false is returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
 This is a short-circuiting terminal operation.
predicate - a non-interfering,
                  stateless
                  predicate to apply to elements of this streamtrue if any elements of the stream match the provided
 predicate, otherwise falseboolean allMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
true is
 returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
 This is a short-circuiting terminal operation.
true (regardless of P(x)).predicate - a non-interfering,
                  stateless
                  predicate to apply to elements of this streamtrue if either all elements of the stream match the
 provided predicate or the stream is empty, otherwise falseboolean noneMatch(Predicate<? super T> predicate)
true is
 returned and the predicate is not evaluated.
 This is a short-circuiting terminal operation.
true, regardless of P(x).predicate - a non-interfering,
                  stateless
                  predicate to apply to elements of this streamtrue if either no elements of the stream match the
 provided predicate or the stream is empty, otherwise falseOptional<T> findFirst()
Optional describing the first element of this stream,
 or an empty Optional if the stream is empty.  If the stream has
 no encounter order, then any element may be returned.
 This is a short-circuiting terminal operation.
Optional describing the first element of this stream,
 or an empty Optional if the stream is emptyNullPointerException - if the element selected is nullOptional<T> findAny()
Optional describing some element of the stream, or an
 empty Optional if the stream is empty.
 This is a short-circuiting terminal operation.
The behavior of this operation is explicitly nondeterministic; it is
 free to select any element in the stream.  This is to allow for maximal
 performance in parallel operations; the cost is that multiple invocations
 on the same source may not return the same result.  (If a stable result
 is desired, use findFirst() instead.)
Optional describing some element of this stream, or an
 empty Optional if the stream is emptyNullPointerException - if the element selected is nullfindFirst()static <T> Stream.Builder<T> builder()
Stream.T - type of elementsstatic <T> Stream<T> empty()
Stream.T - the type of stream elementsstatic <T> Stream<T> of(T t)
Stream containing a single element.T - the type of stream elementst - the single element@SafeVarargs static <T> Stream<T> of(T... values)
T - the type of stream elementsvalues - the elements of the new streamstatic <T> Stream<T> iterate(T seed, UnaryOperator<T> f)
Stream produced by iterative
 application of a function f to an initial element seed,
 producing a Stream consisting of seed, f(seed),
 f(f(seed)), etc.
 The first element (position 0) in the Stream will be
 the provided seed.  For n > 0, the element at position
 n, will be the result of applying the function f to the
 element at position n - 1.
T - the type of stream elementsseed - the initial elementf - a function to be applied to the previous element to produce
          a new elementStreamstatic <T> Stream<T> generate(Supplier<T> s)
Supplier.  This is suitable for
 generating constant streams, streams of random elements, etc.T - the type of stream elementss - the Supplier of generated elementsStreamstatic <T> Stream<T> concat(Stream<? extends T> a, Stream<? extends T> b)
StackOverflowException.T - The type of stream elementsa - the first streamb - the second stream Submit a bug or feature 
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