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Home/ Questions/Q 7800215
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T00:33:45+00:00 2026-06-02T00:33:45+00:00

I find myself often writing such code: Map < String, Set < String >

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I find myself often writing such code:

Map < String, Set < String > > map = new TreeMap < String, Set < String > >();
String key;
String element;
/* ... */
Set < String > value = map.get(key);
if (value == null) {
  value = new TreeSet < String >();
  map.put(key, value);
}
value.add(element);

I hate the if statement above — how can I get rid of it in standard Java? If you can confirm that there is no standard Java solution, it would then be nice if you could suggest a non-standard library that addresses this need.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T00:33:48+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 12:33 am

    Apache Commons Collections has a MultiMap:

    MultiMap mhm = new MultiHashMap();
    mhm.put(key, "A");
    mhm.put(key, "B");
    mhm.put(key, "C");
    Collection coll = (Collection) mhm.get(key);
    

    Guava (used to be Google Collections) has one too, which supports generics, and has both a tree and hash version:

    Multimap<String,String> mhm = new TreeMultimap<String,String>();
    // etc.
    

    To clarify, Multimap<T, S> is basically the same as a Map<T, Collection<S>>, and put automatically creates the collection if it needs to.

    EDIT: Updated to link to Guava, since apparently Google Collections is deprecated.

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