1 / 22

New features in JDK 1.5

New features in JDK 1.5. Can these new and complex features simplify Java development?. dave@marquam.org. Generic Types Auto-boxing/unboxing Enhanced For Loop Enumerations Variable Arguments Static Import Meta-data. Formatted I/O Concurrency Utilities Management Utilities

PamelaLan
Télécharger la présentation

New features in JDK 1.5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New features in JDK 1.5 Can these new and complex features simplify Java development? dave@marquam.org

  2. Generic Types Auto-boxing/unboxing Enhanced For Loop Enumerations Variable Arguments Static Import Meta-data Formatted I/O Concurrency Utilities Management Utilities Class Data Sharing Loads of other improvements Overview

  3. Reasoning "The new language features all have one thing in common: they take some common idiom and provide linguistic support for it. In other words, they shift the responsibility for writing the boilerplate code from the programmer to the compiler." - Joshua Bloch, senior staff engineer, Sun Microsystems

  4. Complementary Features • Generics improve enhanced for loop • Generics and auto-boxing/unboxing allow Enumerated types • Variable args improve API usability • Variable args allow formatted I/O

  5. New features enhance existing API • Generics enhance compile time type checking • Generics improve reflection • Generics allow return type overriding • Enum improves readability and organization of constants • Static import improves utility functions • Auto-boxing improves readability

  6. Generic Types interface Collection <E> { boolean add(E o); boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c); Iterator<E> iterator(); <T> T[] toArray(T[] a); … }

  7. Generic Interface (or Class) interface Collection <E> … Collection<Integer> integers; E is the type parameter for the generic type Collection is the raw type after type erasure Integer is the actual type parameter used when declaring an instance of the generic type Cannot use primitive types but auto-boxing covers over the difference

  8. Using the Type Parameter boolean add(E o); Where ever E is used, the compiler will check the type against the actual type parameter. At runtime E will be Object.

  9. Wildcard Parameters boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c); ? represents an unknown type List<?> list = new ArrayList<String>(); Not legal: List<Object> list = new ArrayList<String>(); Would allow list.add( new Object() );

  10. Bounded Type Parameters boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c); Constrains possible actual types An actual type must be same as E or extend E Can also constrain to implement multiple interfaces

  11. Parameterized Methods <T> T[] toArray(T[] a); Infers the actual type from the actual parameter passed to the method.

  12. Type Erasure • Insures backwards compatibility • Avoids bloat ala C++ templates • Type information still available through reflection

  13. Small Example public static void main ( String... args ) { Collection<String> strs = new ArrayList<String>(); for ( String s : args ) strs.add( s ); Collection<?> readonly = new ArrayList<String> ( strs ); //readonly.add( "some string" ); Not allowed Collection<String> copy = new ArrayList<String> (strs); String[] strAry = strs.toArray( new String[] {} ); }

  14. Auto-boxing/unboxing List<Integer> ints = new ArrayList<Integer>(); ints.add( 1 ); // auto-boxing to new Integer( 1 ) ints.add( 2 ); ints.add( 3 ); for ( int num : ints ) // Auto-unboxing using obj.intValue() System.out.println( num );

  15. Enhanced for loop (foreach) • Improves readability • Reduces boilerplate code • Works with both arrays and objects that expose an iterator

  16. Enumerated Types • Collects related constants into own namespace • Codifies the type-safe enum idiom • Can have constructors, fields and methods • Can subclass • Works well with switch statements • Adds enum keyword to language. May require source changes before compiling with 1.5 compiler. Existing classes should still work.

  17. Enum example enum Suit {clubs, diamonds, hearts, spades} enum Rank {deuce, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, jack, queen, king, ace} List<Card> deck = new ArrayList<Card>(); for (Suit suit : Suit.VALUES) for (Rank rank : Rank.VALUES) deck.add(new Card(suit, rank)); Collections.shuffle(deck);

  18. Switch with Enum Color getColor( Suit suit ) { switch( suit ) { case clubs: case spades: return Color.Black; case diamonds: case hearts: return Color.Red; default: throw new AssertionError( suit + “ not valid value” ); } }

  19. Variable Arguments String format( String format, Object... args ); format(“{2} {1}!”, “World”, “Hello”); • Nicer way to call a method that takes an array of some type • Class…means Class[] inside of the method • Use the enhanced for loop to iterate

  20. Static Import import static java.lang.math.*; … int themax = max( 123123, 23475 ); • Reduces typing • Alleviates need for implementing a Constant Interface • Compiler error if names clash

  21. Meta-data • Available at compile-time or runtime with reflection • Similar concept to XDoclet tags or .Net attributes • @deprecated and @overrides are standard

  22. References Java Generics Tutorial http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5/pdf/generics-tutorial.pdf J2SE 1.5 in a Nutshell http://java.sun.com/developer/technicalArticles/releases/j2se15 A Conversation with Joshua Bloch http://java.sun.com/features/2003/05/bloch_qa.html What's new in J2SE 1.5 http://wiki.schubart.net/wiki/wiki.phtml?title=What's_new_in_J2SE_1.5 David Flanagan Web log http://www.davidflanagan.com/

More Related