@berserk ok, any issues uptill now? I am trying to change a variable of model in click listener, and model's object is final, because inner class access. So, I was thinking of bypassing it using lambda expression for click listener
@ColdFire Reason: if two methods see the same local variable, Java wants you to swear you will not change it - final, in Java speak. Together with the absence of by-reference parameters, this rule ensures that locals are only assigned in the method that they belong to. Code is thus more readable.
a can only be final here. Why? How can I reassign a in onClick() method without keeping it as private member?
private void f(Button b, final int a){
b.addClickHandler(new ClickHandler() {
@Override
public void onClick(ClickEvent event) {
int b ...
> As the value has been copied into the instance of the anonymous inner class, it would look odd if the variable could be modified by the rest of the method - you could have code which appeared to be working with an out-of-date variable (because that's effectively what would be happening... you'd be working with a copy taken at a different time).
> Likewise if you could make changes within the anonymous inner class, developers might expect those changes to be visible within the body of the enclosing method.
When you create an instance of an anonymous inner class, any variables which are used within that class have their values copied in via the autogenerated constructor. This avoids the compiler having to autogenerate various extra types to hold the logical state of the "local variables"
Notification.Builder notBuilder = new Notification.Builder(this) .setContentTitle("Here comes dat boi") .setContentText("Oh shit") .setSmallIcon(android.R.drawable.ic_priority_high_black_24dp);
as for example the C# compiler does... (When C# captures a variable in an anonymous function, it really captures the variable - the closure can update the variable in a way which is seen by the main body of the method, and vice versa.)
"The difference is that optString returns the empty string ("") if the key you specify doesn't exist. getString on the other hand throws a JSONException. Use getString if it's an error for the data to be missing, or optString if you're not sure if it will be there."