As the title says, I was wondering what the time complexity of the contains() method of an ArrayList is.
 
    
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4 Answers
O(n)
The
size,isEmpty,get,set,iterator, andlistIteratoroperations run in constant time. Theaddoperation runs in amortized constant time, that is, adding n elements requires O(n) time. All of the other operations run in linear time (roughly speaking). The constant factor is low compared to that for the LinkedList implementation.
http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/ArrayList.html
 
    
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If you look into the source code for ArrayList and check its contains method it looks as below:
public boolean contains(Object o) {
    return indexOf(o) >= 0;
}
contains delegates the check to the indexOf method. So, if we check the indexOf implementation it is as follows:
public int indexOf(Object o) {
    if (o == null) {
        for (int i = 0; i < size; i++)
            if (elementData[i]==null)
                return i;
    } else {
        for (int i = 0; i < size; i++)
            if (o.equals(elementData[i]))
                return i;
    }
    return -1;
}
As it can be seen from the code, in order to find an index of a given element, one, in the worst case, must iterate through the whole array. As a size of the array grows and so does the search time by an element. Hence, the time complexity of contains method is O(n), where n is the number of elements in the list.
 
    
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its O(n). contains(Object o) is implemented on indexOf() which takes O(n). So complexity of contains(Object o) is defensively O(n) 
Here are some other if you need:
add() - O(1)
add(index, element) – O(n)
get() – O(1)
set() – O(1)
remove() –  (n)
indexOf()` – O(n)
 
    
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                    1Thanks for your answer, two small comments: 1) I am not sure you need to specify "defensively", that is already implied by using `O` notation; 2) technically `add` is not really `O(1)`, in the worst case it is linear, but it runs in *amortized* constant time (see the answer by @davin). – Samuel Jun 06 '20 at 18:00
