Java List.add() UnsupportedOperationException

Many of the List implementation support limited support to add/remove, and Arrays.asList(membersArray) is one of that. You need to insert the record in java.util.ArrayList or use the below approach to convert into ArrayList.

With the minimal change in your code, you can do below to convert a list to ArrayList. The first solution is having a minimum change in your solution, but the second one is more optimized, I guess.

    String[] membersArray = request.getParameterValues('members');
    ArrayList<String> membersList = new ArrayList<>(Arrays.asList(membersArray));

OR

    String[] membersArray = request.getParameterValues('members');
    ArrayList<String> membersList = Stream.of(membersArray).collect(Collectors.toCollection(ArrayList::new));

Not every List implementation supports the add() method.

One common example is the List returned by Arrays.asList(): it is documented not to support any structural modification (i.e. removing or adding elements) (emphasis mine):

Returns a fixed-size list backed by the specified array.

Even if that's not the specific List you're trying to modify, the answer still applies to other List implementations that are either immutable or only allow some selected changes.

You can find out about this by reading the documentation of UnsupportedOperationException and List.add(), which documents this to be an "(optional operation)". The precise meaning of this phrase is explained at the top of the List documentation.

As a workaround you can create a copy of the list to a known-modifiable implementation like ArrayList:

seeAlso = new ArrayList<>(seeAlso);

Form the Inheritance concept, If some perticular method is not available in the current class it will search for that method in super classes. If available it executes.

It executes AbstractList<E> class add() method which throws UnsupportedOperationException.


When you are converting from an Array to a Collection Obejct. i.e., array-based to collection-based API then it is going to provide you fixed-size collection object, because Array's behaviour is of Fixed size.

java.util.Arrays.asList( T... a )

Souce samples for conformation.

public class Arrays {
    public static <T> List<T> asList(T... a) {
        return new java.util.Arrays.ArrayList.ArrayList<>(a); // Arrays Inner Class ArrayList
    }
    //...
    private static class ArrayList<E> extends AbstractList<E> implements RandomAccess, java.io.Serializable {
        //...
    }
}
public abstract class AbstractList<E> extends AbstractCollection<E> implements List<E> {
    public void add(int index, E element) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
    }
    public E set(int index, E element) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
    }
    public E remove(int index) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
    }

    public Iterator<E> iterator() {
        return new Itr();
    }
    private class Itr implements Iterator<E> {
        //...
    }

    public ListIterator<E> listIterator() {
        return listIterator(0);
    }
    private class ListItr extends Itr implements ListIterator<E> {
        //...
    }
}

Form the above Source you may observe that java.util.Arrays.ArrayList class doesn't @Override add(index, element), set(index, element), remove(index). So, From inheritance it executes super AbstractList<E> class add() function which throws UnsupportedOperationException.

As AbstractList<E> is an abstract class it provides the implementation to iterator() and listIterator(). So, that we can iterate over the list object.

List<String> list_of_Arrays = Arrays.asList(new String[] { "a", "b" ,"c"});

try {
    list_of_Arrays.add("Yashwanth.M");
} catch(java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException e) {
    System.out.println("List Interface executes AbstractList add() fucntion which throws UnsupportedOperationException.");
}
System.out.println("Arrays → List : " + list_of_Arrays);

Iterator<String> iterator = list_of_Arrays.iterator();
while (iterator.hasNext()) System.out.println("Iteration : " + iterator.next() );

ListIterator<String> listIterator = list_of_Arrays.listIterator();
while (listIterator.hasNext())    System.out.println("Forward  iteration : " + listIterator.next() );
while(listIterator.hasPrevious()) System.out.println("Backward iteration : " + listIterator.previous());

You can even create Fixed-Size array form Collections class Collections.unmodifiableList(list);

Sample Source:

public class Collections {
    public static <T> List<T> unmodifiableList(List<? extends T> list) {
        return (list instanceof RandomAccess ?
                new UnmodifiableRandomAccessList<>(list) :
                new UnmodifiableList<>(list));
    }
}

A Collection — sometimes called a container — is simply an object that groups multiple elements into a single unit. Collections are used to store, retrieve, manipulate, and communicate aggregate data.

@see also

  • HashMap vs HashTable
  • Object Serialization uses the Serializable and Externalizable interfaces