In Java, an Optional
value is a fusion of a bit that indicates presence or absence, with a value of an arbitrary reference type T
or a primitive int
, long
, or double
.
Fusing these is especially useful when returning a value from a method, as methods have only a single return value. It's often necessary to use a special value such as null
in the case of reference types, or -1 in the case of int
, as a sentinel to indicate the "no-value" case. Using Optional
as a return value avoids the problem of the caller accidentally misusing the sentinel value as the real return value.
Given this, line of code such as
Optional.ofNullable(port).ifPresent(settings::setPort);
is strange in that it fuses a value with the present/absent bit in the first part of the line and then immediately separates them in the second part of the line. This adds complexity to what is ultimately a fairly simple task: checking whether port
is non-null and conditionally performing some action. The alternative code snippet:
if (port != null) {
settings.setPort(port);
}
expresses quite clearly exactly what it does.
It's true that the if-statement takes more vertical space than the Optional
chain. The Optional
chain is denser, but it's also harder to understand: a poor tradeoff.
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