Vector vs ArrayList in Java
Now let's see some key difference between Vector and ArrayList in Java, this will decide when is the right time to use Vector over ArrayList and vice-versa. Differences are based upon properties like synchronization, thread safety, speed, performance , navigation and Iteration over List etc.1) Synchronization and thread-safety
First and foremost difference between Vector and ArrayList is that Vector is synchronized and ArrayList is not, what it means is that all the method which structurally modifies Vector e.g. add () or remove () are synchronized which makes it thread-safe and allows it to be used safely in a multi-threaded and concurrent environment. On the other hand ArrayList methods are not synchronized thus not suitable for use in multi-threaded environment.
2) Speed and Performance
ArrayList is way faster than Vector. Since Vector is synchronized and thread-safe it pays price of synchronization which makes it little slow. On the other hand ArrayList is not synchronized and fast which makes it obvious choice in a single-threaded access environment.
3) Capacity
Whenever Vector crossed the threshold specified it increases itself by value specified in capacityIncrement field while you can increase size of ArrayList by calling ensureCapacity () method.
4) Enumeration and Iterator
Vector can return enumeration of items it hold by calling elements () method which is not fail-fast as opposed to Iterator and ListIterator returned by ArrayList.
5) Legacy
Another point worth to remember is Vector is one of those classes which comes with JDK 1.0 and initially not part of Collection framework but in later version it's been re-factored to implement List interface so that it could become part of collection framework
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