In Java 8, is there a ByteStream class?

Use com.google.common.primitives.Bytes.asList(byte[]).stream() instead.


I like this solution since it does it at runtime from a byte [], rather than building a collection and then streaming from a collection. This just does one byte at a time to the stream I believe.

byte [] bytes =_io.readAllBytes(file);
AtomicInteger ai = new AtomicInteger(0);

Stream.generate(() -> bytes[ai.getAndIncrement()]).limit(bytes.length);

However this is quite slow due to the synchronization bottleneck of the AtomicInteger, so back to imperative loops!


Most of the byte-related operations are automatically promoted to int. For example, let's consider the simple method which adds a byte constant to each element of byte[] array returning new byte[] array (potential candidate for ByteStream):

public static byte[] add(byte[] arr, byte addend) {
    byte[] result = new byte[arr.length];
    int i=0;
    for(byte b : arr) {
        result[i++] = (byte) (b+addend);
    }
    return result;
}

See, even though we perform an addition of two byte variables, they are widened to int and you need to cast the result back to byte. In Java bytecode most of byte-related operations (except array load/store and cast to byte) are expressed with 32-bit integer instructions (iadd, ixor, if_icmple and so on). Thus practically it's ok to process bytes as ints with IntStream. We just need two additional operations:

  • Create an IntStream from byte[] array (widening bytes to ints)
  • Collect an IntStream to byte[] array (using (byte) cast)

The first one is really easy and can be implemented like this:

public static IntStream intStream(byte[] array) {
    return IntStream.range(0, array.length).map(idx -> array[idx]);
}

So you may add such static method to your project and be happy.

Collecting the stream into byte[] array is more tricky. Using standard JDK classes the simplest solution is ByteArrayOutputStream:

public static byte[] toByteArray(IntStream stream) {
    return stream.collect(ByteArrayOutputStream::new, (baos, i) -> baos.write((byte) i),
            (baos1, baos2) -> baos1.write(baos2.toByteArray(), 0, baos2.size()))
            .toByteArray();
}

However it has unnecessary overhead due to synchronization. Also it would be nice to specially process the streams of known length to reduce the allocations and copying. Nevertheless now you can use the Stream API for byte[] arrays:

public static byte[] addStream(byte[] arr, byte addend) {
    return toByteArray(intStream(arr).map(b -> b+addend));
}

My StreamEx library has both of these operations in the IntStreamEx class which enhances standard IntStream, so you can use it like this:

public static byte[] addStreamEx(byte[] arr, byte addend) {
    return IntStreamEx.of(arr).map(b -> b+addend).toByteArray();
}

Internally toByteArray() method uses simple resizable byte buffer and specially handles the case when the stream is sequential and target size is known in advance.


No, it does not exist. Actually, it was explicitly not implemented so as not to clutter the Stream API with tons of classes for every primitive type.

Quoting a mail from Brian Goetz in the OpenJDK mailing list:  

Short answer: no.

It is not worth another 100K+ of JDK footprint each for these forms which are used almost never. And if we added those, someone would demand short, float, or boolean.

Put another way, if people insisted we had all the primitive specializations, we would have no primitive specializations. Which would be worse than the status quo.