@GwtCompatible(emulated=true) public final class Maps extends Object
Map instances (including instances of SortedMap, BiMap, etc.). Also see this class's counterparts Lists, Sets
 and Queues.
 See the Guava User Guide article on  Maps.
| Modifier and Type | Class and Description | 
|---|---|
static interface  | 
Maps.EntryTransformer<K,V1,V2>
A transformation of the value of a key-value pair, using both key and value as inputs. 
 | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
static <A,B> Converter<A,B> | 
asConverter(BiMap<A,B> bimap)
Returns a  
Converter that converts values using bimap.get(), and whose
 inverse view converts values using bimap.inverse().get(). | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
asMap(NavigableSet<K> set,
     Function<? super K,V> function)
Returns a view of the navigable set as a map, mapping keys from the set according to the
 specified function. 
 | 
static <K,V> Map<K,V> | 
asMap(Set<K> set,
     Function<? super K,V> function)
Returns a live  
Map view whose keys are the contents of set and whose values are
 computed on demand using function. | 
static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> | 
asMap(SortedSet<K> set,
     Function<? super K,V> function)
Returns a view of the sorted set as a map, mapping keys from the set according to the specified
 function. 
 | 
static <K,V> MapDifference<K,V> | 
difference(Map<? extends K,? extends V> left,
          Map<? extends K,? extends V> right)
Computes the difference between two maps. 
 | 
static <K,V> MapDifference<K,V> | 
difference(Map<? extends K,? extends V> left,
          Map<? extends K,? extends V> right,
          Equivalence<? super V> valueEquivalence)
Computes the difference between two maps. 
 | 
static <K,V> SortedMapDifference<K,V> | 
difference(SortedMap<K,? extends V> left,
          Map<? extends K,? extends V> right)
Computes the difference between two sorted maps, using the comparator of the left map, or
  
Ordering.natural() if the left map uses the natural ordering of its elements. | 
static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> | 
filterEntries(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered,
             Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
Returns a bimap containing the mappings in  
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> Map<K,V> | 
filterEntries(Map<K,V> unfiltered,
             Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
Returns a map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
filterEntries(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered,
             Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
Returns a sorted map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> | 
filterEntries(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered,
             Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
Returns a sorted map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> | 
filterKeys(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered,
          Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
Returns a bimap containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> Map<K,V> | 
filterKeys(Map<K,V> unfiltered,
          Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
Returns a map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
filterKeys(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered,
          Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
Returns a navigable map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a
 predicate. | 
static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> | 
filterKeys(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered,
          Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
Returns a sorted map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a
 predicate. | 
static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> | 
filterValues(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered,
            Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
Returns a bimap containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose values satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> Map<K,V> | 
filterValues(Map<K,V> unfiltered,
            Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
Returns a map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose values satisfy a predicate. | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
filterValues(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered,
            Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
Returns a navigable map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose values satisfy a
 predicate. | 
static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> | 
filterValues(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered,
            Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
Returns a sorted map containing the mappings in  
unfiltered whose values satisfy a
 predicate. | 
static ImmutableMap<String,String> | 
fromProperties(Properties properties)
Creates an  
ImmutableMap<String, String> from a Properties instance. | 
static <K,V> Map.Entry<K,V> | 
immutableEntry(K key,
              V value)
Returns an immutable map entry with the specified key and value. 
 | 
static <K extends Enum<K>,V> | 
immutableEnumMap(Map<K,? extends V> map)
Returns an immutable map instance containing the given entries. 
 | 
static <K,V> ConcurrentMap<K,V> | 
newConcurrentMap()
Creates a new empty  
ConcurrentHashMap instance. | 
static <K extends Enum<K>,V> | 
newEnumMap(Class<K> type)
Creates an  
EnumMap instance. | 
static <K extends Enum<K>,V> | 
newEnumMap(Map<K,? extends V> map)
Creates an  
EnumMap with the same mappings as the specified map. | 
static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> | 
newHashMap()
Creates a mutable, empty  
HashMap instance. | 
static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> | 
newHashMap(Map<? extends K,? extends V> map)
Creates a mutable  
HashMap instance with the same mappings as the specified map. | 
static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> | 
newHashMapWithExpectedSize(int expectedSize)
Creates a  
HashMap instance, with a high enough "initial capacity" that it should
 hold expectedSize elements without growth. | 
static <K,V> IdentityHashMap<K,V> | 
newIdentityHashMap()
Creates an  
IdentityHashMap instance. | 
static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> | 
newLinkedHashMap()
Creates a mutable, empty, insertion-ordered  
LinkedHashMap instance. | 
static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> | 
newLinkedHashMap(Map<? extends K,? extends V> map)
Creates a mutable, insertion-ordered  
LinkedHashMap instance with the same
 mappings as the specified map. | 
static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> | 
newLinkedHashMapWithExpectedSize(int expectedSize)
Creates a  
LinkedHashMap instance, with a high enough "initial capacity" that it
 should hold expectedSize elements without growth. | 
static <K extends Comparable,V> | 
newTreeMap()
Creates a mutable, empty  
TreeMap instance using the natural ordering of its
 elements. | 
static <C,K extends C,V> | 
newTreeMap(Comparator<C> comparator)
Creates a mutable, empty  
TreeMap instance using the given comparator. | 
static <K,V> TreeMap<K,V> | 
newTreeMap(SortedMap<K,? extends V> map)
Creates a mutable  
TreeMap instance with the same mappings as the specified map
 and using the same ordering as the specified map. | 
static <K extends Comparable<? super K>,V> | 
subMap(NavigableMap<K,V> map,
      Range<K> range)
Returns a view of the portion of  
map whose keys are contained by range. | 
static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> | 
synchronizedBiMap(BiMap<K,V> bimap)
Returns a synchronized (thread-safe) bimap backed by the specified bimap. 
 | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
synchronizedNavigableMap(NavigableMap<K,V> navigableMap)
Returns a synchronized (thread-safe) navigable map backed by the specified navigable map. 
 | 
static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> | 
toMap(Iterable<K> keys,
     Function<? super K,V> valueFunction)
Returns an immutable map whose keys are the distinct elements of  
keys and whose value
 for each key was computed by valueFunction. | 
static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> | 
toMap(Iterator<K> keys,
     Function<? super K,V> valueFunction)
Returns an immutable map whose keys are the distinct elements of  
keys and whose value
 for each key was computed by valueFunction. | 
static <K,V1,V2> Map<K,V2> | 
transformEntries(Map<K,V1> fromMap,
                Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
Returns a view of a map whose values are derived from the original map's entries. 
 | 
static <K,V1,V2> NavigableMap<K,V2> | 
transformEntries(NavigableMap<K,V1> fromMap,
                Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
Returns a view of a navigable map whose values are derived from the original navigable map's
 entries. 
 | 
static <K,V1,V2> SortedMap<K,V2> | 
transformEntries(SortedMap<K,V1> fromMap,
                Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
Returns a view of a sorted map whose values are derived from the original sorted map's entries. 
 | 
static <K,V1,V2> Map<K,V2> | 
transformValues(Map<K,V1> fromMap,
               Function<? super V1,V2> function)
Returns a view of a map where each value is transformed by a function. 
 | 
static <K,V1,V2> NavigableMap<K,V2> | 
transformValues(NavigableMap<K,V1> fromMap,
               Function<? super V1,V2> function)
Returns a view of a navigable map where each value is transformed by a function. 
 | 
static <K,V1,V2> SortedMap<K,V2> | 
transformValues(SortedMap<K,V1> fromMap,
               Function<? super V1,V2> function)
Returns a view of a sorted map where each value is transformed by a function. 
 | 
static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> | 
uniqueIndex(Iterable<V> values,
           Function<? super V,K> keyFunction)
Returns a map with the given  
values, indexed by keys derived from those values. | 
static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> | 
uniqueIndex(Iterator<V> values,
           Function<? super V,K> keyFunction)
Returns a map with the given  
values, indexed by keys derived from those values. | 
static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> | 
unmodifiableBiMap(BiMap<? extends K,? extends V> bimap)
Returns an unmodifiable view of the specified bimap. 
 | 
static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> | 
unmodifiableNavigableMap(NavigableMap<K,? extends V> map)
Returns an unmodifiable view of the specified navigable map. 
 | 
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) @Beta public static <K extends Enum<K>,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> immutableEnumMap(Map<K,? extends V> map)
EnumMap.
 The iteration order of the returned map follows the enum's iteration order, not the order in which the elements appear in the given map.
map - the map to make an immutable copy ofpublic static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> newHashMap()
HashMap instance.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableMap.of() instead.
 
Note: if K is an enum type, use newEnumMap(java.lang.Class<K>) instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the HashMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
HashMappublic static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> newHashMap(Map<? extends K,? extends V> map)
HashMap instance with the same mappings as the specified map.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableMap.copyOf(Map) instead.
 
Note: if K is an Enum type, use newEnumMap(java.lang.Class<K>) instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the HashMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
map - the mappings to be placed in the new mapHashMap initialized with the mappings from mappublic static <K,V> HashMap<K,V> newHashMapWithExpectedSize(int expectedSize)
HashMap instance, with a high enough "initial capacity" that it should
 hold expectedSize elements without growth. This behavior cannot be broadly guaranteed,
 but it is observed to be true for OpenJDK 1.7. It also can't be guaranteed that the method
 isn't inadvertently oversizing the returned map.expectedSize - the number of entries you expect to add to the returned mapHashMap with enough capacity to hold expectedSize entries
     without resizingIllegalArgumentException - if expectedSize is negativepublic static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> newLinkedHashMap()
LinkedHashMap instance.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableMap.of() instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the LinkedHashMap constructor directly, taking advantage of
 the new "diamond" syntax.
LinkedHashMappublic static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> newLinkedHashMap(Map<? extends K,? extends V> map)
LinkedHashMap instance with the same
 mappings as the specified map.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableMap.copyOf(Map) instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the LinkedHashMap constructor directly, taking advantage of
 the new "diamond" syntax.
map - the mappings to be placed in the new mapLinkedHashMap initialized with the mappings from mappublic static <K,V> LinkedHashMap<K,V> newLinkedHashMapWithExpectedSize(int expectedSize)
LinkedHashMap instance, with a high enough "initial capacity" that it
 should hold expectedSize elements without growth. This behavior cannot be
 broadly guaranteed, but it is observed to be true for OpenJDK 1.7. It also can't be guaranteed
 that the method isn't inadvertently oversizing the returned map.expectedSize - the number of entries you expect to add to the returned mapLinkedHashMap with enough capacity to hold expectedSize
     entries without resizingIllegalArgumentException - if expectedSize is negativepublic static <K,V> ConcurrentMap<K,V> newConcurrentMap()
ConcurrentHashMap instance.public static <K extends Comparable,V> TreeMap<K,V> newTreeMap()
TreeMap instance using the natural ordering of its
 elements.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableSortedMap.of() instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the TreeMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
TreeMappublic static <K,V> TreeMap<K,V> newTreeMap(SortedMap<K,? extends V> map)
TreeMap instance with the same mappings as the specified map
 and using the same ordering as the specified map.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableSortedMap.copyOfSorted(SortedMap) instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the TreeMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
map - the sorted map whose mappings are to be placed in the new map and whose comparator
     is to be used to sort the new mapTreeMap initialized with the mappings from map and using the
     comparator of mappublic static <C,K extends C,V> TreeMap<K,V> newTreeMap(@NullableDecl Comparator<C> comparator)
TreeMap instance using the given comparator.
 Note: if mutability is not required, use ImmutableSortedMap.orderedBy(comparator).build() instead.
 
Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the TreeMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
comparator - the comparator to sort the keys withTreeMappublic static <K extends Enum<K>,V> EnumMap<K,V> newEnumMap(Class<K> type)
EnumMap instance.type - the key type for this mapEnumMappublic static <K extends Enum<K>,V> EnumMap<K,V> newEnumMap(Map<K,? extends V> map)
EnumMap with the same mappings as the specified map.
 Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the EnumMap constructor directly, taking advantage of the new
 "diamond" syntax.
map - the map from which to initialize this EnumMapEnumMap initialized with the mappings from mapIllegalArgumentException - if m is not an EnumMap instance and contains
     no mappingspublic static <K,V> IdentityHashMap<K,V> newIdentityHashMap()
IdentityHashMap instance.
 Note for Java 7 and later: this method is now unnecessary and should be treated as
 deprecated. Instead, use the IdentityHashMap constructor directly, taking advantage of
 the new "diamond" syntax.
IdentityHashMappublic static <K,V> MapDifference<K,V> difference(Map<? extends K,? extends V> left, Map<? extends K,? extends V> right)
Since this method uses HashMap instances internally, the keys of the supplied maps
 must be well-behaved with respect to Object.equals(java.lang.Object) and Object.hashCode().
 
Note:If you only need to know whether two maps have the same mappings, call left.equals(right) instead of this method.
left - the map to treat as the "left" map for purposes of comparisonright - the map to treat as the "right" map for purposes of comparisonpublic static <K,V> MapDifference<K,V> difference(Map<? extends K,? extends V> left, Map<? extends K,? extends V> right, Equivalence<? super V> valueEquivalence)
Since this method uses HashMap instances internally, the keys of the supplied maps
 must be well-behaved with respect to Object.equals(java.lang.Object) and Object.hashCode().
left - the map to treat as the "left" map for purposes of comparisonright - the map to treat as the "right" map for purposes of comparisonvalueEquivalence - the equivalence relationship to use to compare valuespublic static <K,V> SortedMapDifference<K,V> difference(SortedMap<K,? extends V> left, Map<? extends K,? extends V> right)
Ordering.natural() if the left map uses the natural ordering of its elements. This
 difference is an immutable snapshot of the state of the maps at the time this method is called.
 It will never change, even if the maps change at a later time.
 Since this method uses TreeMap instances internally, the keys of the right map must
 all compare as distinct according to the comparator of the left map.
 
Note:If you only need to know whether two sorted maps have the same mappings, call
 left.equals(right) instead of this method.
left - the map to treat as the "left" map for purposes of comparisonright - the map to treat as the "right" map for purposes of comparisonpublic static <K,V> Map<K,V> asMap(Set<K> set, Function<? super K,V> function)
Map view whose keys are the contents of set and whose values are
 computed on demand using function. To get an immutable copy instead, use toMap(Iterable, Function).
 Specifically, for each k in the backing set, the returned map has an entry mapping
 k to function.apply(k). The keySet, values, and entrySet views of the returned map iterate in the same order as the backing set.
 
Modifications to the backing set are read through to the returned map. The returned map supports removal operations if the backing set does. Removal operations write through to the backing set. The returned map does not support put operations.
Warning: If the function rejects null, caution is required to make sure the
 set does not contain null, because the view cannot stop null from being added
 to the set.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of key type K,
 k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of type K. Using a key type for
 which this may not hold, such as ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when
 calling methods on the resulting map view.
public static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> asMap(SortedSet<K> set, Function<? super K,V> function)
Specifically, for each k in the backing set, the returned map has an entry mapping
 k to function.apply(k). The keySet, values, and entrySet views of the returned map iterate in the same order as the backing set.
 
Modifications to the backing set are read through to the returned map. The returned map supports removal operations if the backing set does. Removal operations write through to the backing set. The returned map does not support put operations.
Warning: If the function rejects null, caution is required to make sure the
 set does not contain null, because the view cannot stop null from being added
 to the set.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of key type K,
 k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of type K. Using a key type for
 which this may not hold, such as ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when
 calling methods on the resulting map view.
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> asMap(NavigableSet<K> set, Function<? super K,V> function)
Specifically, for each k in the backing set, the returned map has an entry mapping
 k to function.apply(k). The keySet, values, and entrySet views of the returned map iterate in the same order as the backing set.
 
Modifications to the backing set are read through to the returned map. The returned map supports removal operations if the backing set does. Removal operations write through to the backing set. The returned map does not support put operations.
Warning: If the function rejects null, caution is required to make sure the
 set does not contain null, because the view cannot stop null from being added
 to the set.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of key type K,
 k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of type K. Using a key type for
 which this may not hold, such as ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when
 calling methods on the resulting map view.
public static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> toMap(Iterable<K> keys, Function<? super K,V> valueFunction)
keys and whose value
 for each key was computed by valueFunction. The map's iteration order is the order of
 the first appearance of each key in keys.
 When there are multiple instances of a key in keys, it is unspecified whether valueFunction will be applied to more than one instance of that key and, if it is, which
 result will be mapped to that key in the returned map.
 
If keys is a Set, a live view can be obtained instead of a copy using asMap(Set, Function).
NullPointerException - if any element of keys is null, or if valueFunction produces null for any keypublic static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> toMap(Iterator<K> keys, Function<? super K,V> valueFunction)
keys and whose value
 for each key was computed by valueFunction. The map's iteration order is the order of
 the first appearance of each key in keys.
 When there are multiple instances of a key in keys, it is unspecified whether valueFunction will be applied to more than one instance of that key and, if it is, which
 result will be mapped to that key in the returned map.
NullPointerException - if any element of keys is null, or if valueFunction produces null for any key@CanIgnoreReturnValue public static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> uniqueIndex(Iterable<V> values, Function<? super V,K> keyFunction)
values, indexed by keys derived from those values. In
 other words, each input value produces an entry in the map whose key is the result of applying
 keyFunction to that value. These entries appear in the same order as the input values.
 Example usage:
 
 Color red = new Color("red", 255, 0, 0);
 ...
 ImmutableSet<Color> allColors = ImmutableSet.of(red, green, blue);
 Map<String, Color> colorForName =
     uniqueIndex(allColors, toStringFunction());
 assertThat(colorForName).containsEntry("red", red);
 
 If your index may associate multiple values with each key, use Multimaps.index.
values - the values to use when constructing the MapkeyFunction - the function used to produce the key for each valuekeyFunction on each value
     in the input collection to that valueIllegalArgumentException - if keyFunction produces the same key for more than one
     value in the input collectionNullPointerException - if any element of values is null, or if keyFunction produces null for any value@CanIgnoreReturnValue public static <K,V> ImmutableMap<K,V> uniqueIndex(Iterator<V> values, Function<? super V,K> keyFunction)
values, indexed by keys derived from those values. In
 other words, each input value produces an entry in the map whose key is the result of applying
 keyFunction to that value. These entries appear in the same order as the input values.
 Example usage:
 
 Color red = new Color("red", 255, 0, 0);
 ...
 Iterator<Color> allColors = ImmutableSet.of(red, green, blue).iterator();
 Map<String, Color> colorForName =
     uniqueIndex(allColors, toStringFunction());
 assertThat(colorForName).containsEntry("red", red);
 
 If your index may associate multiple values with each key, use Multimaps.index.
values - the values to use when constructing the MapkeyFunction - the function used to produce the key for each valuekeyFunction on each value
     in the input collection to that valueIllegalArgumentException - if keyFunction produces the same key for more than one
     value in the input collectionNullPointerException - if any element of values is null, or if keyFunction produces null for any value@GwtIncompatible public static ImmutableMap<String,String> fromProperties(Properties properties)
ImmutableMap<String, String> from a Properties instance. Properties
 normally derive from Map<Object, Object>, but they typically contain strings, which is
 awkward. This method lets you get a plain-old-Map out of a Properties.properties - a Properties object to be convertedpropertiesClassCastException - if any key in Properties is not a StringNullPointerException - if any key or value in Properties is null@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public static <K,V> Map.Entry<K,V> immutableEntry(@NullableDecl K key, @NullableDecl V value)
Map.Entry.setValue(V)
 operation throws an UnsupportedOperationException.
 The returned entry is serializable.
key - the key to be associated with the returned entryvalue - the value to be associated with the returned entry@Beta public static <A,B> Converter<A,B> asConverter(BiMap<A,B> bimap)
Converter that converts values using bimap.get(), and whose
 inverse view converts values using bimap.inverse().get().
 To use a plain Map as a Function, see Functions.forMap(Map) or Functions.forMap(Map, Object).
public static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> synchronizedBiMap(BiMap<K,V> bimap)
It is imperative that the user manually synchronize on the returned map when accessing any of its collection views:
 BiMap<Long, String> map = Maps.synchronizedBiMap(
     HashBiMap.<Long, String>create());
 ...
 Set<Long> set = map.keySet();  // Needn't be in synchronized block
 ...
 synchronized (map) {  // Synchronizing on map, not set!
   Iterator<Long> it = set.iterator(); // Must be in synchronized block
   while (it.hasNext()) {
     foo(it.next());
   }
 }
 
 Failure to follow this advice may result in non-deterministic behavior.
The returned bimap will be serializable if the specified bimap is serializable.
bimap - the bimap to be wrapped in a synchronized viewpublic static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> unmodifiableBiMap(BiMap<? extends K,? extends V> bimap)
UnsupportedOperationException.
 The returned bimap will be serializable if the specified bimap is serializable.
bimap - the bimap for which an unmodifiable view is to be returnedpublic static <K,V1,V2> Map<K,V2> transformValues(Map<K,V1> fromMap, Function<? super V1,V2> function)
 Map<String, Integer> map = ImmutableMap.of("a", 4, "b", 9);
 Function<Integer, Double> sqrt =
     new Function<Integer, Double>() {
       public Double apply(Integer in) {
         return Math.sqrt((int) in);
       }
     };
 Map<String, Double> transformed = Maps.transformValues(map, sqrt);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {a=2.0, b=3.0}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys, and even null values provided that the function is capable of accepting null input. The transformed map might contain null values, if the function sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The function is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned map
 to be a view, but it means that the function will be applied many times for bulk operations
 like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Map.toString(). For this to perform well, function should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map doesn't need to be a
 view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
public static <K,V1,V2> SortedMap<K,V2> transformValues(SortedMap<K,V1> fromMap, Function<? super V1,V2> function)
 SortedMap<String, Integer> map = ImmutableSortedMap.of("a", 4, "b", 9);
 Function<Integer, Double> sqrt =
     new Function<Integer, Double>() {
       public Double apply(Integer in) {
         return Math.sqrt((int) in);
       }
     };
 SortedMap<String, Double> transformed =
      Maps.transformValues(map, sqrt);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {a=2.0, b=3.0}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys, and even null values provided that the function is capable of accepting null input. The transformed map might contain null values, if the function sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The function is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned map
 to be a view, but it means that the function will be applied many times for bulk operations
 like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Map.toString(). For this to perform well, function should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map doesn't need to be a
 view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V1,V2> NavigableMap<K,V2> transformValues(NavigableMap<K,V1> fromMap, Function<? super V1,V2> function)
 NavigableMap<String, Integer> map = Maps.newTreeMap();
 map.put("a", 4);
 map.put("b", 9);
 Function<Integer, Double> sqrt =
     new Function<Integer, Double>() {
       public Double apply(Integer in) {
         return Math.sqrt((int) in);
       }
     };
 NavigableMap<String, Double> transformed =
      Maps.transformNavigableValues(map, sqrt);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {a=2.0, b=3.0}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys, and even null values provided that the function is capable of accepting null input. The transformed map might contain null values, if the function sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The function is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned map
 to be a view, but it means that the function will be applied many times for bulk operations
 like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Map.toString(). For this to perform well, function should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map doesn't need to be a
 view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
public static <K,V1,V2> Map<K,V2> transformEntries(Map<K,V1> fromMap, Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
transformValues(java.util.Map<K, V1>, com.google.common.base.Function<? super V1, V2>), this method's entry-transformation logic may depend on the key as
 well as the value.
 All other properties of the transformed map, such as iteration order, are left intact. For example, the code:
 Map<String, Boolean> options =
     ImmutableMap.of("verbose", true, "sort", false);
 EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String> flagPrefixer =
     new EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String>() {
       public String transformEntry(String key, Boolean value) {
         return value ? key : "no" + key;
       }
     };
 Map<String, String> transformed =
     Maps.transformEntries(options, flagPrefixer);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {verbose=verbose, sort=nosort}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys and null values provided that the transformer is capable of accepting null inputs. The transformed map might contain null values if the transformer sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The transformer is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned
 map to be a view, but it means that the transformer will be applied many times for bulk
 operations like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Object.toString(). For this to perform
 well, transformer should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map
 doesn't need to be a view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of EntryTransformer key type K, k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of
 type K. Using an EntryTransformer key type for which this may not hold, such as
 ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when calling methods on the
 transformed map.
public static <K,V1,V2> SortedMap<K,V2> transformEntries(SortedMap<K,V1> fromMap, Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
transformValues(java.util.Map<K, V1>, com.google.common.base.Function<? super V1, V2>), this method's entry-transformation logic may depend on
 the key as well as the value.
 All other properties of the transformed map, such as iteration order, are left intact. For example, the code:
 Map<String, Boolean> options =
     ImmutableSortedMap.of("verbose", true, "sort", false);
 EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String> flagPrefixer =
     new EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String>() {
       public String transformEntry(String key, Boolean value) {
         return value ? key : "yes" + key;
       }
     };
 SortedMap<String, String> transformed =
     Maps.transformEntries(options, flagPrefixer);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {sort=yessort, verbose=verbose}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys and null values provided that the transformer is capable of accepting null inputs. The transformed map might contain null values if the transformer sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The transformer is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned
 map to be a view, but it means that the transformer will be applied many times for bulk
 operations like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Object.toString(). For this to perform
 well, transformer should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map
 doesn't need to be a view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of EntryTransformer key type K, k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of
 type K. Using an EntryTransformer key type for which this may not hold, such as
 ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when calling methods on the
 transformed map.
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V1,V2> NavigableMap<K,V2> transformEntries(NavigableMap<K,V1> fromMap, Maps.EntryTransformer<? super K,? super V1,V2> transformer)
transformValues(java.util.Map<K, V1>, com.google.common.base.Function<? super V1, V2>), this method's entry-transformation logic may
 depend on the key as well as the value.
 All other properties of the transformed map, such as iteration order, are left intact. For example, the code:
 NavigableMap<String, Boolean> options = Maps.newTreeMap();
 options.put("verbose", false);
 options.put("sort", true);
 EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String> flagPrefixer =
     new EntryTransformer<String, Boolean, String>() {
       public String transformEntry(String key, Boolean value) {
         return value ? key : ("yes" + key);
       }
     };
 NavigableMap<String, String> transformed =
     LabsMaps.transformNavigableEntries(options, flagPrefixer);
 System.out.println(transformed);
 
 ... prints {sort=yessort, verbose=verbose}.
 Changes in the underlying map are reflected in this view. Conversely, this view supports removal operations, and these are reflected in the underlying map.
It's acceptable for the underlying map to contain null keys and null values provided that the transformer is capable of accepting null inputs. The transformed map might contain null values if the transformer sometimes gives a null result.
The returned map is not thread-safe or serializable, even if the underlying map is.
The transformer is applied lazily, invoked when needed. This is necessary for the returned
 map to be a view, but it means that the transformer will be applied many times for bulk
 operations like Map.containsValue(java.lang.Object) and Object.toString(). For this to perform
 well, transformer should be fast. To avoid lazy evaluation when the returned map
 doesn't need to be a view, copy the returned map into a new map of your choosing.
 
Warning: This method assumes that for any instance k of EntryTransformer key type K, k.equals(k2) implies that k2 is also of
 type K. Using an EntryTransformer key type for which this may not hold, such as
 ArrayList, may risk a ClassCastException when calling methods on the
 transformed map.
public static <K,V> Map<K,V> filterKeys(Map<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a predicate. The
 returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and
 putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose keys satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: keyPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented at
 Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
public static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> filterKeys(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a
 predicate. The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the
 other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and
 putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose keys satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: keyPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented at
 Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> filterKeys(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a
 predicate. The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the
 other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and
 putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose keys satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: keyPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented at
 Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
public static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> filterKeys(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super K> keyPredicate)
unfiltered whose keys satisfy a predicate.
 The returned bimap is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting bimap's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the bimap
 and its views. When given a key that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the bimap's put(),
 forcePut() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered
 bimap or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 bimap.
 
The returned bimap isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered bimap's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key in
 the underlying bimap and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is not
 needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered bimap and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals , as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
public static <K,V> Map<K,V> filterValues(Map<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
unfiltered whose values satisfy a predicate.
 The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a value that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put(),
 putAll(), and Map.Entry.setValue(V) methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose values satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: valuePredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
public static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> filterValues(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
unfiltered whose values satisfy a
 predicate. The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the
 other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a value that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put(),
 putAll(), and Map.Entry.setValue(V) methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose values satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: valuePredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> filterValues(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
unfiltered whose values satisfy a
 predicate. The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the
 other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a value that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put(),
 putAll(), and Map.Entry.setValue(V) methods throw an IllegalArgumentException.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings whose values satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: valuePredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T). Do not provide a predicate such as Predicates.instanceOf(ArrayList.class), which is inconsistent with equals.
public static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> filterValues(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super V> valuePredicate)
unfiltered whose values satisfy a predicate.
 The returned bimap is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting bimap's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the bimap
 and its views. When given a value that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the bimap's put(), forcePut() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException. Similarly, the map's entries have a Map.Entry.setValue(V) method
 that throws an IllegalArgumentException when the provided value doesn't satisfy the
 predicate.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered
 bimap or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 bimap.
 
The returned bimap isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered bimap's methods, such as size(), iterate across every value in
 the underlying bimap and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is not
 needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered bimap and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals , as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
public static <K,V> Map<K,V> filterEntries(Map<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. The
 returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key/value pair that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException. Similarly, the
 map's entries have a Map.Entry.setValue(V) method that throws an IllegalArgumentException when the existing key and the provided value don't satisfy the
 predicate.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
public static <K,V> SortedMap<K,V> filterEntries(SortedMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate.
 The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key/value pair that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException. Similarly, the
 map's entries have a Map.Entry.setValue(V) method that throws an IllegalArgumentException when the existing key and the provided value don't satisfy the
 predicate.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> filterEntries(NavigableMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate.
 The returned map is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting map's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the map
 and its views. When given a key/value pair that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the map's put() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException. Similarly, the
 map's entries have a Map.Entry.setValue(V) method that throws an IllegalArgumentException when the existing key and the provided value don't satisfy the
 predicate.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered map
 or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying map.
 
The returned map isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered map's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying map and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered map and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals, as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
public static <K,V> BiMap<K,V> filterEntries(BiMap<K,V> unfiltered, Predicate<? super Map.Entry<K,V>> entryPredicate)
unfiltered that satisfy a predicate. The
 returned bimap is a live view of unfiltered; changes to one affect the other.
 The resulting bimap's keySet(), entrySet(), and values() views have
 iterators that don't support remove(), but all other methods are supported by the bimap
 and its views. When given a key/value pair that doesn't satisfy the predicate, the bimap's
 put(), forcePut() and putAll() methods throw an IllegalArgumentException. Similarly, the map's entries have an Map.Entry.setValue(V) method
 that throws an IllegalArgumentException when the existing key and the provided value
 don't satisfy the predicate.
 
When methods such as removeAll() and clear() are called on the filtered
 bimap or its views, only mappings that satisfy the filter will be removed from the underlying
 bimap.
 
The returned bimap isn't threadsafe or serializable, even if unfiltered is.
 
Many of the filtered bimap's methods, such as size(), iterate across every key/value
 mapping in the underlying bimap and determine which satisfy the filter. When a live view is
 not needed, it may be faster to copy the filtered bimap and use the copy.
 
Warning: entryPredicate must be consistent with equals , as documented
 at Predicate.apply(T).
@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> unmodifiableNavigableMap(NavigableMap<K,? extends V> map)
UnsupportedOperationException.
 The returned navigable map will be serializable if the specified navigable map is serializable.
This method's signature will not permit you to convert a NavigableMap<? extends K,
 V> to a NavigableMap<K, V>. If it permitted this, the returned map's comparator() method might return a Comparator<? extends K>, which works only on a
 particular subtype of K, but promise that it's a Comparator<? super K>, which
 must work on any type of K.
map - the navigable map for which an unmodifiable view is to be returned@GwtIncompatible public static <K,V> NavigableMap<K,V> synchronizedNavigableMap(NavigableMap<K,V> navigableMap)
It is imperative that the user manually synchronize on the returned navigable map when
 iterating over any of its collection views, or the collections views of any of its descendingMap, subMap, headMap or tailMap views.
 
 NavigableMap<K, V> map = synchronizedNavigableMap(new TreeMap<K, V>());
 // Needn't be in synchronized block
 NavigableSet<K> set = map.navigableKeySet();
 synchronized (map) { // Synchronizing on map, not set!
   Iterator<K> it = set.iterator(); // Must be in synchronized block
   while (it.hasNext()) {
     foo(it.next());
   }
 }
 
 or:
 NavigableMap<K, V> map = synchronizedNavigableMap(new TreeMap<K, V>());
 NavigableMap<K, V> map2 = map.subMap(foo, false, bar, true);
 // Needn't be in synchronized block
 NavigableSet<K> set2 = map2.descendingKeySet();
 synchronized (map) { // Synchronizing on map, not map2 or set2!
   Iterator<K> it = set2.iterator(); // Must be in synchronized block
   while (it.hasNext()) {
     foo(it.next());
   }
 }
 
 Failure to follow this advice may result in non-deterministic behavior.
The returned navigable map will be serializable if the specified navigable map is serializable.
navigableMap - the navigable map to be "wrapped" in a synchronized navigable map.@Beta @GwtIncompatible public static <K extends Comparable<? super K>,V> NavigableMap<K,V> subMap(NavigableMap<K,V> map, Range<K> range)
map whose keys are contained by range.
 This method delegates to the appropriate methods of NavigableMap (namely subMap(), tailMap(), and headMap()) to actually construct the view. Consult these methods for a full
 description of the returned view's behavior.
 
Warning: Ranges always represent a range of values using the values' natural
 ordering. NavigableMap on the other hand can specify a custom ordering via a Comparator, which can violate the natural ordering. Using this method (or in general using
 Range) with unnaturally-ordered maps can lead to unexpected and undefined behavior.
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