This small Maven project shows how to use JavaFastPFOR (from the fast-pack/JavaFastPFOR repository) to compress and uncompress an int[] using FastPFOR128. We use both gradle and maven.
- JDK 21 installed and available on your PATH
- Maven 3.6+ (tested with Maven 3.9)
Verify with:
mvn -v
java -versionWe added the JitPack repository to our pom.xml and use the exact coordinates published for this project. The project exposes the artifact as JavaFastPFOR with a tag-style version. For example:
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>jitpack.io</id>
<url>https://jitpack.io</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.fast-pack</groupId>
<artifactId>JavaFastPFOR</artifactId>
<version>JavaFastPFOR-0.3.1</version>
</dependency>Note: coordinates are case-sensitive. Using JavaFastPFor (different case) or a short 0.3.1 version may fail if that exact artifact/version was not published.
Download dependencies and compile:
mvn packageRun the Main class included in this project:
mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=org.example.MainThe demo compresses an array of length 9984, then uncompresses it and prints a small verification summary. Example output:
N=9984 compressedSizeWords=XXX mismatches=0
first 20 original: [0, 0, 0, ...]
first 20 recovered: [0, 0, 0, ...]
This project also includes a Gradle build.
repositories {
mavenCentral()
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
dependencies {
implementation 'com.github.fast-pack:JavaFastPFOR:JavaFastPFOR-0.3.1'
}
It uses the JitPack repository and the same dependency coordinates.
Build with Gradle:
./gradlew clean buildRun the demo with Gradle:
./gradlew runIf you don't have the wrapper, you can use a local Gradle installation:
gradle clean build
gradle run