@Unihedro annotationjava.lang.Override: Indicates that a method declaration is intended to override a method declaration in a supertype. If a method is annotated with this annotation type compilers are required to generate an error message unless at least one of the following conditions hold: The method does override or implement a method declared in a supertype. The method has a signature that is ...
override-equivalent to that of any public method declared in Object.
Its point would be to make the source code clearer so the programmer reading it without an IDE that marks the method as overriding would know? It also asserts a compile-time error to be thrown if an Override annotation is used on a non-overriding method.
Just like @FunctionalInterface, it doesn't have to be added for an FI to be an FI, but it asserts compiler warnings to be present. As well as IDE warnings.
Let me try to answer the question about final. This makes the compiler declare more functional contracts, which is usually pointless because some fields are contextually final anyway. However, since the keyword is used in many places, you'd have to dive into each of those levels. Let's go to a final type first.
ok, there's a utility method Math.random(), which uses a private field in class Math as private Random randomNumberGenerator.
If the compiler infers that the field is final and optimizes it away, you can't change the randomNumberGenerator variable anymore to mock Math.random()!
private void setUpRandomness() {
try {
Field field = Math.class.getDeclaredField("randomNumberGenerator");
field.setAccessible(true);
field.set(null, new Random() {
@Override
public double nextDouble() {
return 4; // chosen by fair dice roll.
} // guaranteed to be random.
}); // Proof: xkcd.com/221
}
catch (final SecurityException | NoSuchFieldException | IllegalArgumentException | IllegalAccessException e)
Actually, compilers optimizes away very few things. Like compiling:
Another issue is multithreading. For normal fields you need to make sure the writes are visible to other threads (so visibility alone does not help there), but final fields are guaranteed to be safe for reading
Yes, and when final Type variable is used it asserts that the first write to it is finished before moving onto the rest of the stack, if multithreading's involved.
Otherwise JIT optimizes away that bit as well. It usually doesn't matter, but eh.
It's not that hard to determine, at the very least inside of methods, that a variable is declared once, read a couple times, then dies.
It's also possible to determine that throughout the entire code graph, there's only this one place where a variable is written to, even in object/class variables.
At least I'm happy to be able to place these kinds of assertions to the code where they both make the intent of the code clear, and get done at compile rather than at run time
@fge public ABC requestMethod(Request request) { dao.getMethod(request); }
// In DAO there is implementation of the method getMethod I want to mock the call of dao.getMethod(request) with my mocked ABC class object I am trying this: when(dao.getMethod(request)).thenReturn(ABCMock); Am i doing it right? Because function doesnt mock it's response and returns the actual response of implementation instead of my mocked response
@SecondRikudo and I can give recommendations but that's your call, ultimately; also, it should tell whether tables are populated with some test data or something
And "all that"; there is no hard rule but the work needs to go in one direction, not several :p
Among the core decisions are which build tool
I'd prefer gradle but again, that's your call, not mine
The same assholes that abuse animals because "they are stupid and don't have feelings" are going to be the same assholes to abuse their robot butlers in the future and cause a robot uprising. STOP animal abuse NOW!
Well, from what you explain, to me it is only a question of selecting all error reports for a particular car since its last visit (or "the beginning of time" if it has never been handled before)
Well, the thing is that I imagine that there has to be a connection between an appointment and an error report because as far as I know, you always book a time to fix it. I interpret the data gathering's purpose as finding out how long a customer have to wait in between the error report and when that particular error is fixed
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