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Mastering Concurrency Programming with Java 8

You're reading from   Mastering Concurrency Programming with Java 8 Master the principles and techniques of multithreaded programming with the Java 8 Concurrency API

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785886126
Length 430 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Javier Fernández González Javier Fernández González
Author Profile Icon Javier Fernández González
Javier Fernández González
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The First Step – Concurrency Design Principles FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing Lots of Threads – Executors 3. Getting the Maximum from Executors 4. Getting Data from the Tasks – The Callable and Future Interfaces 5. Running Tasks Divided into Phases – The Phaser Class 6. Optimizing Divide and Conquer Solutions – The Fork/Join Framework 7. Processing Massive Datasets with Parallel Streams – The Map and Reduce Model 8. Processing Massive Datasets with Parallel Streams – The Map and Collect Model 9. Diving into Concurrent Data Structures and Synchronization Utilities 10. Integration of Fragments and Implementation of Alternatives 11. Testing and Monitoring Concurrent Applications Index

The second example – creating an inverted index for a collection of documents

In the information retrieval world, an inverted index is a common data structure used to speed up the searches of text in a collection of documents. It stores all the words of the document collection and a list of the documents that contains that word.

To construct the index, we have to parse all the documents of the collection and construct the index in an incremental way. For every document, we extract the significant words of that document (deleting the most common words, also called stop words and maybe applying a stemming algorithm) and then add those words to the index. If a word exists in the index, we add the document to the list of documents associated with that word. If a word doesn't exist, add the word to the list of words of the index and associate the document to that word. You can add parameters to the association, as the term frequency of the word in the document that provides you more...

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