What does UTF stand for in the writeUTF() method that serializes Strings?
Does it look like something that makes sense? ``` objectOutputStream.flush(); objectOutputStream.close(); ``` `close()` automatically invokes `flush()`, doesn't it?
One thing I don’t get about InputStreams and OutputStreams is this. Why do you need to cast those returned ints into bytes to get their real values? Aren’t those higher bits going to be zeros (as long as the byte capacity is not exceeded)?
@SergeyZolotarev For most fields, you're absolutely right
A public getter and setter with no customisations is functionally identical to a public field
Half the idea behind getters and setters for everything, though, is to detach data from logic; meaning in the future, you could refactor and completely remove a field from a class, but delegate it via a backwards compatible setter
For fields with a custom setter, it's more obvious; you could have validation logic directly in the setter, in which case there are clear advantages to a setter
personally, I've started switching away from getters and setters. Unless they serve an explicit purpose, I consider them boilerplate