In my Data Structures class we have studies the Java ArrayList class, and how it grows the underlying array when a user adds more elements. That is understood. However, I cannot figure out how exactly this class frees up memory when lots of elements are removed from the list. Looking at the source, there are three methods that remove elements:
public E remove(int index) {
 RangeCheck(index);
 modCount++;
 E oldValue = (E) elementData[index];
 int numMoved = size - index - 1;
 if (numMoved > 0)
     System.arraycopy(elementData, index+1, elementData, index,
        numMoved);
 elementData[--size] = null; // Let gc do its work
 return oldValue;
}
public boolean remove(Object o) {
 if (o == null) {
            for (int index = 0; index < size; index++)
  if (elementData[index] == null) {
      fastRemove(index);
      return true;
  }
 } else {
     for (int index = 0; index < size; index++)
  if (o.equals(elementData[index])) {
      fastRemove(index);
      return true;
  }
        }
 return false;
}
private void fastRemove(int index) {
        modCount++;
        int numMoved = size - index - 1;
        if (numMoved > 0)
            System.arraycopy(elementData, index+1, elementData, index, 
                             numMoved);
        elementData[--size] = null; // Let gc do its work
}
None of them reduce the datastore array. I even started questioning if memory free up ever happens, but empirical tests show that it does. So there must be some other way it is done, but where and how? I checked the parent classes as well with no success.
 
     
     
     
     
     
    