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Improved Developer 
Productivity With Java SE 8 
Simon Ritter 
Head of Java Technology Evangelism 
Oracle Corp 
Twitter: @speakjava 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Safe Harbor Statement 
The following is intended to outline our general product direction. It is intended for 
information purposes only, and may not be incorporated into any contract. It is not a 
commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon 
in making purchasing decisions. The development, release, and timing of any features or 
functionality described for Oracle’s products remains at the sole discretion of Oracle. 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
2
Java SE 8 New Features 
(Other Than Lambdas and Streams) 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Annotations On Java Types 
• Annotations can currently only be used on type declarations 
– Classes, methods, variable definitions 
• Extension for places where types are used 
– e.g. parameters 
• Permits error detection by pluggable type checkers 
– e.g. null pointer errors, race conditions, etc 
public void process(@immutable List data) {…}
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Concurrency Updates 
• Scalable update variables 
– DoubleAccumulator, DoubleAdder, etc 
– Multiple variables avoid update contention 
– Good for frequent updates, infrequent reads 
• ConcurrentHashMap updates 
– Improved scanning support, key computation 
• ForkJoinPool improvements 
– Completion based design for IO bound applications 
– Thread that is blocked hands work to thread that is running
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Parallel Array Sorting 
• Additional utility methods in java.util.Arrays 
– parallelSort (multiple signatures for different primitives) 
• Anticipated minimum improvement of 30% over sequential sort 
– For dual core system with appropriate sized data set 
• Built on top of the fork-join framework 
– Uses Doug Lea’s ParallelArray implementation 
– Requires working space the same size as the array being sorted
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Date And Time APIs 
• A new date, time, and calendar API for the Java SE platform 
• Supports standard time concepts 
– Partial, duration, period, intervals 
– date, time, instant, and time-zone 
• Provides a limited set of calendar systems and be extensible to others 
• Uses relevant standards, including ISO-8601, CLDR, and BCP47 
• Based on an explicit time-scale with a connection to UTC
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
HTTP URL Permissions 
• New type of network permission 
– Grant access in terms of URLs, rather than IP addresses 
• Current way to specify network permissions 
– java.net.SocketPermission 
– Not restricted to just HTTP 
– Operates in terms of IP addresses only 
• New, higher level capabilities 
– Support HTTP operations (POST, GET, etc)
Compact Profiles 
Approximate static footprint goals 
11Mb 
16Mb 
30Mb 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Compact1 Profile 
Compact2 Profile 
Compact3 Profile 
Full JRE 54Mb
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Nashorn JavaScript Engine 
• Lightweight, high-performance JavaScript engine 
– Integrated into JRE 
• Use existing javax.script API 
• ECMAScript-262 Edition 5.1 language specification compliance 
• New command-line tool, jjs to run JavaScript 
• Internationalised error messages and documentation
Retire Rarely-Used GC Combinations 
• Rarely used 
– DefNew + CMS 
– ParNew + SerialOld 
– Incremental CMS 
• Large testing effort for little return 
• Will generate deprecated option messages 
– Won’t disappear just yet 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Remove The Permanent Generation 
• No more need to tune the size of it 
• Current objects moved to Java heap or native memory 
– Interned strings 
– Class metadata 
– Class static variables 
• Part of the HotSpot, JRockit convergence 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Permanently
Lambdas And Streams 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
The Problem: External Iteration 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
List<Student> students = ... 
double highestScore = 0.0; 
for (Student s : students) { 
if (s.getGradYear() == 2011) { 
if (s.getScore() > highestScore) 
highestScore = s.score; 
} 
} 
• Our code controls iteration 
• Inherently serial: iterate from 
beginning to end 
• Not thread-safe 
• Business logic is stateful 
• Mutable accumulator variable
Internal Iteration With Inner Classes 
• Iteration handled by the library 
• Not inherently serial – traversal may 
be done in parallel 
• Traversal may be done lazily – so one 
pass, rather than three 
• Thread safe – client logic is stateless 
• High barrier to use 
– Syntactically ugly 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
More Functional 
double highestScore = students 
.filter(new Predicate<Student>() { 
public boolean op(Student s) { 
return s.getGradYear() == 2011; 
} 
}) 
.map(new Mapper<Student,Double>() { 
public Double extract(Student s) { 
return s.getScore(); 
} 
}) 
.max();
Internal Iteration With Lambdas 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
List<Student> students = ... 
double highestScore = students 
.filter(Student s -> s.getGradYear() == 2011) 
.map(Student s -> s.getScore()) 
.max(); 
• More readable 
• More abstract 
• Less error-prone 
NOTE: This is not JDK8 code
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Lambda Expressions 
Some Details 
• Lambda expressions represent anonymous functions 
– Same structure as a method 
• typed argument list, return type, set of thrown exceptions, and a body 
– Not associated with a class 
• We now have parameterised behaviour, not just values 
double highestScore = students. 
filter(Student s -> s.getGradYear() == 2011). 
map(Student s -> s.getScore()) 
max(); 
What 
How
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Lambda Expression Types 
• Single-method interfaces are used extensively in Java 
– Definition: a functional interface is an interface with one abstract method 
– Functional interfaces are identified structurally 
– The type of a lambda expression will be a functional interface 
• Lambda expressions provide implementations of the abstract method 
interface Comparator<T> { boolean compare(T x, T y); } 
interface FileFilter { boolean accept(File x); } 
interface Runnable { void run(); } 
interface ActionListener { void actionPerformed(…); } 
interface Callable<T> { T call(); }
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Local Variable Capture 
• Lambda expressions can refer to effectively final local variables from the 
enclosing scope 
• Effectively final: A variable that meets the requirements for final variables (i.e., 
assigned once), even if not explicitly declared final 
• Closures on values, not variables 
void expire(File root, long before) { 
root.listFiles(File p -> p.lastModified() <= before); 
}
What Does ‘this’ Mean For Lambdas? 
• ‘this’ refers to the enclosing object, not the lambda itself 
• Think of ‘this’ as a final predefined local 
• Remember the Lambda is an anonymous function 
– It is not associated with a class 
– Therefore there can be no ‘this’ for the Lambda 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Referencing Instance Variables 
Which are not final, or effectively final 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
class DataProcessor { 
private int currentValue; 
public void process() { 
DataSet myData = myFactory.getDataSet(); 
dataSet.forEach(d -> d.use(currentValue++)); 
} 
}
Referencing Instance Variables 
The compiler helps us out 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
class DataProcessor { 
private int currentValue; 
public void process() { 
DataSet myData = myFactory.getDataSet(); 
dataSet.forEach(d -> d.use(this.currentValue++)); 
} 
} 
‘this’ (which is effectively final) 
inserted by the compiler
static T void sort(List<T> l, Comparator<? super T> c); 
List<String> list = getList(); 
Collections.sort(list, (String x, String y) -> x.length() - y.length()); 
Collections.sort(list, (x, y) -> x.length() - y.length()); 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Type Inference 
• The compiler can often infer parameter types in a lambda expression 
 Inferrence based on the target functional interface’s method signature 
• Fully statically typed (no dynamic typing sneaking in) 
– More typing with less typing
Method And Constructor References 
• Method references let us reuse a method as a lambda expression 
FileFilter x = File f -> f.canRead(); 
FileFilter x = File::canRead; 
• Same syntax works for constructors 
Factory<List<String>> f = ArrayList<String>::new; 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Library Evolution 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Library Evolution Goal 
• Requirement: aggregate operations on collections 
–New methods required on Collections to facilitate this 
int heaviestBlueBlock = blocks 
.filter(b -> b.getColor() == BLUE) 
.map(Block::getWeight) 
.reduce(0, Integer::max); 
• This is problematic 
– Can’t add new methods to interfaces without modifying all implementations 
– Can’t necessarily find or control all implementations 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Solution: Default Methods 
• Specified in the interface 
• From the caller’s perspective, just an ordinary interface method 
• Provides a default implementation 
• Default only used when implementation classes do not provide a body for the 
extension method 
• Implementation classes can provide a better version, or not 
interface Collection<E> { 
default Stream<E> stream() { 
return StreamSupport.stream(spliterator()); 
} 
}
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Virtual Extension Methods 
Stop right there! 
• Err, isn’t this implementing multiple inheritance for Java? 
• Yes, but Java already has multiple inheritance of types 
• This adds multiple inheritance of behavior too 
• But not state, which is where most of the trouble is 
• Can still be a source of complexity 
• Class implements two interfaces, both of which have default methods 
• Same signature 
• How does the compiler differentiate? 
• Static methods also allowed in interfaces in Java SE 8
Functional Interface Definition 
• Single Abstract Method (SAM) type 
• A functional interface is an interface that has one abstract method 
– Represents a single function contract 
– Doesn’t mean it only has one method 
• @FunctionalInterface annotation 
– Helps ensure the functional interface contract is honoured 
– Compiler error if not a SAM 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Lambdas In Full Flow: 
Streams 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Source 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Stream Overview 
Pipeline 
• A stream pipeline consists of three types of things 
– A source 
– Zero or more intermediate operations 
– A terminal operation 
• Producing a result or a side-effect 
int total = transactions.stream() 
.filter(t -> t.getBuyer().getCity().equals(“London”)) 
.mapToInt(Transaction::getPrice) 
.sum(); 
Intermediate operation 
Terminal operation
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Stream Sources 
Many Ways To Create 
• From collections and arrays 
– Collection.stream() 
– Collection.parallelStream() 
– Arrays.stream(T array) or Stream.of() 
• Static factories 
– IntStream.range() 
– Files.walk() 
• Roll your own 
– java.util.Spliterator
Stream Terminal Operations 
• The pipeline is only evaluated when the terminal operation is called 
– All operations can execute sequentially or in parallel 
– Intermediate operations can be merged 
• Avoiding multiple redundant passes on data 
• Short-circuit operations (e.g. findFirst) 
• Lazy evaluation 
– Stream characteristics help identify optimisations 
• DISTINT stream passed to distinct() is a no-op 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Helping To Eliminate the NullPointerException 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Optional Class 
• Terminal operations like min(), max(), etc do not return a direct result 
• Suppose the input Stream is empty? 
• Optional<T> 
– Container for an object reference (null, or real object) 
– Think of it like a Stream of 0 or 1 elements 
– use get(), ifPresent() and orElse() to access the stored reference 
– Can use in more complex ways: filter(), map(), etc
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 1 
Convert words in list to upper case 
List<String> output = wordList 
.stream() 
.map(String::toUpperCase) 
.collect(Collectors.toList());
Example 1 
Convert words in list to upper case (in parallel) 
List<String> output = wordList 
.parralelStream() 
.map(String::toUpperCase) 
.collect(Collectors.toList()); 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 2 
Count lines in a file 
• BufferedReader has new method 
– Stream<String> lines() 
long count = bufferedReader 
.lines() 
.count();
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 3 
Join lines 3-4 into a single string 
String output = bufferedReader 
.lines() 
.skip(2) 
.limit(2) 
.collect(Collectors.joining());
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 4 
Collect all words in a file into a list 
List<String> output = reader 
.lines() 
.flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(REGEXP))) 
.filter(word -> word.length() > 0) 
.collect(Collectors.toList());
Example 5 
List of unique words in lowercase, sorted by length 
List<String> output = reader 
.lines() 
.flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(REGEXP))) 
.filter(word -> word.length() > 0) 
.map(String::toLowerCase) 
.distinct() 
.sorted((x, y) -> x.length() - y.length()) 
.collect(Collectors.toList()); 
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 6: Real World 
Infinite stream from thermal sensor 
private int double currentTemperature; 
... 
thermalReader 
.lines() 
.mapToDouble(s -> 
Double.parseDouble(s.substring(0, s.length() - 1))) 
.map(t -> ((t – 32) * 5 / 9) 
.filter(t -> t != currentTemperature) 
.peek(t -> listener.ifPresent(l -> l.temperatureChanged(t))) 
.forEach(t -> currentTemperature = t);
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Example 6: Real World 
Infinite stream from thermal sensor 
private int double currentTemperature; 
... 
thermalReader 
.lines() 
.mapToDouble(s -> 
Double.parseDouble(s.substring(0, s.length() - 1))) 
.map(t -> ((t – 32) * 5 / 9) 
.filter(t -> t != this.currentTemperature) 
.peek(t -> listener.ifPresent(l -> l.temperatureChanged(t))) 
.forEach(t -> this.currentTemperature = t);
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Conclusions 
• Java SE 8 is a significant change to Java 
– New features in language, libraries and VM 
• Java needs lambda statements 
– Significant improvements in existing libraries are required 
• Require a mechanism for interface evolution 
– Solution: virtual extension methods 
• Bulk operations on Collections 
– Much simpler with Lambdas 
• Java will continue to evolve to meet developer's needs
Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 
Graphic Section Divider

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Improved Developer Productivity In JDK8

  • 1. Improved Developer Productivity With Java SE 8 Simon Ritter Head of Java Technology Evangelism Oracle Corp Twitter: @speakjava Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 2. Safe Harbor Statement The following is intended to outline our general product direction. It is intended for information purposes only, and may not be incorporated into any contract. It is not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasing decisions. The development, release, and timing of any features or functionality described for Oracle’s products remains at the sole discretion of Oracle. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. 2
  • 3. Java SE 8 New Features (Other Than Lambdas and Streams) Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 4. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Annotations On Java Types • Annotations can currently only be used on type declarations – Classes, methods, variable definitions • Extension for places where types are used – e.g. parameters • Permits error detection by pluggable type checkers – e.g. null pointer errors, race conditions, etc public void process(@immutable List data) {…}
  • 5. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Concurrency Updates • Scalable update variables – DoubleAccumulator, DoubleAdder, etc – Multiple variables avoid update contention – Good for frequent updates, infrequent reads • ConcurrentHashMap updates – Improved scanning support, key computation • ForkJoinPool improvements – Completion based design for IO bound applications – Thread that is blocked hands work to thread that is running
  • 6. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Parallel Array Sorting • Additional utility methods in java.util.Arrays – parallelSort (multiple signatures for different primitives) • Anticipated minimum improvement of 30% over sequential sort – For dual core system with appropriate sized data set • Built on top of the fork-join framework – Uses Doug Lea’s ParallelArray implementation – Requires working space the same size as the array being sorted
  • 7. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Date And Time APIs • A new date, time, and calendar API for the Java SE platform • Supports standard time concepts – Partial, duration, period, intervals – date, time, instant, and time-zone • Provides a limited set of calendar systems and be extensible to others • Uses relevant standards, including ISO-8601, CLDR, and BCP47 • Based on an explicit time-scale with a connection to UTC
  • 8. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. HTTP URL Permissions • New type of network permission – Grant access in terms of URLs, rather than IP addresses • Current way to specify network permissions – java.net.SocketPermission – Not restricted to just HTTP – Operates in terms of IP addresses only • New, higher level capabilities – Support HTTP operations (POST, GET, etc)
  • 9. Compact Profiles Approximate static footprint goals 11Mb 16Mb 30Mb Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Compact1 Profile Compact2 Profile Compact3 Profile Full JRE 54Mb
  • 10. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Nashorn JavaScript Engine • Lightweight, high-performance JavaScript engine – Integrated into JRE • Use existing javax.script API • ECMAScript-262 Edition 5.1 language specification compliance • New command-line tool, jjs to run JavaScript • Internationalised error messages and documentation
  • 11. Retire Rarely-Used GC Combinations • Rarely used – DefNew + CMS – ParNew + SerialOld – Incremental CMS • Large testing effort for little return • Will generate deprecated option messages – Won’t disappear just yet Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 12. Remove The Permanent Generation • No more need to tune the size of it • Current objects moved to Java heap or native memory – Interned strings – Class metadata – Class static variables • Part of the HotSpot, JRockit convergence Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Permanently
  • 13. Lambdas And Streams Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 14. The Problem: External Iteration Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. List<Student> students = ... double highestScore = 0.0; for (Student s : students) { if (s.getGradYear() == 2011) { if (s.getScore() > highestScore) highestScore = s.score; } } • Our code controls iteration • Inherently serial: iterate from beginning to end • Not thread-safe • Business logic is stateful • Mutable accumulator variable
  • 15. Internal Iteration With Inner Classes • Iteration handled by the library • Not inherently serial – traversal may be done in parallel • Traversal may be done lazily – so one pass, rather than three • Thread safe – client logic is stateless • High barrier to use – Syntactically ugly Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. More Functional double highestScore = students .filter(new Predicate<Student>() { public boolean op(Student s) { return s.getGradYear() == 2011; } }) .map(new Mapper<Student,Double>() { public Double extract(Student s) { return s.getScore(); } }) .max();
  • 16. Internal Iteration With Lambdas Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. List<Student> students = ... double highestScore = students .filter(Student s -> s.getGradYear() == 2011) .map(Student s -> s.getScore()) .max(); • More readable • More abstract • Less error-prone NOTE: This is not JDK8 code
  • 17. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Lambda Expressions Some Details • Lambda expressions represent anonymous functions – Same structure as a method • typed argument list, return type, set of thrown exceptions, and a body – Not associated with a class • We now have parameterised behaviour, not just values double highestScore = students. filter(Student s -> s.getGradYear() == 2011). map(Student s -> s.getScore()) max(); What How
  • 18. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Lambda Expression Types • Single-method interfaces are used extensively in Java – Definition: a functional interface is an interface with one abstract method – Functional interfaces are identified structurally – The type of a lambda expression will be a functional interface • Lambda expressions provide implementations of the abstract method interface Comparator<T> { boolean compare(T x, T y); } interface FileFilter { boolean accept(File x); } interface Runnable { void run(); } interface ActionListener { void actionPerformed(…); } interface Callable<T> { T call(); }
  • 19. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Local Variable Capture • Lambda expressions can refer to effectively final local variables from the enclosing scope • Effectively final: A variable that meets the requirements for final variables (i.e., assigned once), even if not explicitly declared final • Closures on values, not variables void expire(File root, long before) { root.listFiles(File p -> p.lastModified() <= before); }
  • 20. What Does ‘this’ Mean For Lambdas? • ‘this’ refers to the enclosing object, not the lambda itself • Think of ‘this’ as a final predefined local • Remember the Lambda is an anonymous function – It is not associated with a class – Therefore there can be no ‘this’ for the Lambda Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 21. Referencing Instance Variables Which are not final, or effectively final Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. class DataProcessor { private int currentValue; public void process() { DataSet myData = myFactory.getDataSet(); dataSet.forEach(d -> d.use(currentValue++)); } }
  • 22. Referencing Instance Variables The compiler helps us out Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. class DataProcessor { private int currentValue; public void process() { DataSet myData = myFactory.getDataSet(); dataSet.forEach(d -> d.use(this.currentValue++)); } } ‘this’ (which is effectively final) inserted by the compiler
  • 23. static T void sort(List<T> l, Comparator<? super T> c); List<String> list = getList(); Collections.sort(list, (String x, String y) -> x.length() - y.length()); Collections.sort(list, (x, y) -> x.length() - y.length()); Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Type Inference • The compiler can often infer parameter types in a lambda expression  Inferrence based on the target functional interface’s method signature • Fully statically typed (no dynamic typing sneaking in) – More typing with less typing
  • 24. Method And Constructor References • Method references let us reuse a method as a lambda expression FileFilter x = File f -> f.canRead(); FileFilter x = File::canRead; • Same syntax works for constructors Factory<List<String>> f = ArrayList<String>::new; Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 25. Library Evolution Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 26. Library Evolution Goal • Requirement: aggregate operations on collections –New methods required on Collections to facilitate this int heaviestBlueBlock = blocks .filter(b -> b.getColor() == BLUE) .map(Block::getWeight) .reduce(0, Integer::max); • This is problematic – Can’t add new methods to interfaces without modifying all implementations – Can’t necessarily find or control all implementations Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 27. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Solution: Default Methods • Specified in the interface • From the caller’s perspective, just an ordinary interface method • Provides a default implementation • Default only used when implementation classes do not provide a body for the extension method • Implementation classes can provide a better version, or not interface Collection<E> { default Stream<E> stream() { return StreamSupport.stream(spliterator()); } }
  • 28. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Virtual Extension Methods Stop right there! • Err, isn’t this implementing multiple inheritance for Java? • Yes, but Java already has multiple inheritance of types • This adds multiple inheritance of behavior too • But not state, which is where most of the trouble is • Can still be a source of complexity • Class implements two interfaces, both of which have default methods • Same signature • How does the compiler differentiate? • Static methods also allowed in interfaces in Java SE 8
  • 29. Functional Interface Definition • Single Abstract Method (SAM) type • A functional interface is an interface that has one abstract method – Represents a single function contract – Doesn’t mean it only has one method • @FunctionalInterface annotation – Helps ensure the functional interface contract is honoured – Compiler error if not a SAM Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 30. Lambdas In Full Flow: Streams Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 31. Source Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Stream Overview Pipeline • A stream pipeline consists of three types of things – A source – Zero or more intermediate operations – A terminal operation • Producing a result or a side-effect int total = transactions.stream() .filter(t -> t.getBuyer().getCity().equals(“London”)) .mapToInt(Transaction::getPrice) .sum(); Intermediate operation Terminal operation
  • 32. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Stream Sources Many Ways To Create • From collections and arrays – Collection.stream() – Collection.parallelStream() – Arrays.stream(T array) or Stream.of() • Static factories – IntStream.range() – Files.walk() • Roll your own – java.util.Spliterator
  • 33. Stream Terminal Operations • The pipeline is only evaluated when the terminal operation is called – All operations can execute sequentially or in parallel – Intermediate operations can be merged • Avoiding multiple redundant passes on data • Short-circuit operations (e.g. findFirst) • Lazy evaluation – Stream characteristics help identify optimisations • DISTINT stream passed to distinct() is a no-op Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 34. Helping To Eliminate the NullPointerException Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Optional Class • Terminal operations like min(), max(), etc do not return a direct result • Suppose the input Stream is empty? • Optional<T> – Container for an object reference (null, or real object) – Think of it like a Stream of 0 or 1 elements – use get(), ifPresent() and orElse() to access the stored reference – Can use in more complex ways: filter(), map(), etc
  • 35. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 1 Convert words in list to upper case List<String> output = wordList .stream() .map(String::toUpperCase) .collect(Collectors.toList());
  • 36. Example 1 Convert words in list to upper case (in parallel) List<String> output = wordList .parralelStream() .map(String::toUpperCase) .collect(Collectors.toList()); Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 37. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 2 Count lines in a file • BufferedReader has new method – Stream<String> lines() long count = bufferedReader .lines() .count();
  • 38. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 3 Join lines 3-4 into a single string String output = bufferedReader .lines() .skip(2) .limit(2) .collect(Collectors.joining());
  • 39. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 4 Collect all words in a file into a list List<String> output = reader .lines() .flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(REGEXP))) .filter(word -> word.length() > 0) .collect(Collectors.toList());
  • 40. Example 5 List of unique words in lowercase, sorted by length List<String> output = reader .lines() .flatMap(line -> Stream.of(line.split(REGEXP))) .filter(word -> word.length() > 0) .map(String::toLowerCase) .distinct() .sorted((x, y) -> x.length() - y.length()) .collect(Collectors.toList()); Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
  • 41. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 6: Real World Infinite stream from thermal sensor private int double currentTemperature; ... thermalReader .lines() .mapToDouble(s -> Double.parseDouble(s.substring(0, s.length() - 1))) .map(t -> ((t – 32) * 5 / 9) .filter(t -> t != currentTemperature) .peek(t -> listener.ifPresent(l -> l.temperatureChanged(t))) .forEach(t -> currentTemperature = t);
  • 42. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Example 6: Real World Infinite stream from thermal sensor private int double currentTemperature; ... thermalReader .lines() .mapToDouble(s -> Double.parseDouble(s.substring(0, s.length() - 1))) .map(t -> ((t – 32) * 5 / 9) .filter(t -> t != this.currentTemperature) .peek(t -> listener.ifPresent(l -> l.temperatureChanged(t))) .forEach(t -> this.currentTemperature = t);
  • 43. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Conclusions • Java SE 8 is a significant change to Java – New features in language, libraries and VM • Java needs lambda statements – Significant improvements in existing libraries are required • Require a mechanism for interface evolution – Solution: virtual extension methods • Bulk operations on Collections – Much simpler with Lambdas • Java will continue to evolve to meet developer's needs
  • 44. Copyright © 2014, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Graphic Section Divider

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. This is a Title Slide with Java FY15 Theme slide ideal for including the Java Theme with a brief title, subtitle and presenter information. To customize this slide with your own picture: Right-click the slide area and choose Format Background from the pop-up menu. From the Fill menu, click Picture and texture fill. Under Insert from: click File. Locate your new picture and click Insert. To copy the Customized Background from Another Presentation on PC Click New Slide from the Home tab's Slides group and select Reuse Slides. Click Browse in the Reuse Slides panel and select Browse Files. Double-click the PowerPoint presentation that contains the background you wish to copy. Check Keep Source Formatting and click the slide that contains the background you want. Click the left-hand slide preview to which you wish to apply the new master layout. Apply New Layout (Important): Right-click any selected slide, point to Layout, and click the slide containing the desired layout from the layout gallery. Delete any unwanted slides or duplicates. To copy the Customized Background from Another Presentation on Mac Click New Slide from the Home tab's Slides group and select Insert Slides from Other Presentation… Navigate to the PowerPoint presentation file that contains the background you wish to copy. Double-click or press Insert. This prompts the Slide Finder dialogue box. Make sure Keep design of original slides is unchecked and click the slide(s) that contains the background you want. Hold Shift key to select multiple slides. Click the left-hand slide preview to which you wish to apply the new master layout. Apply New Layout (Important): Click Layout from the Home tab's Slides group, and click the slide containing the desired layout from the layout gallery. Delete any unwanted slides or duplicates.
  2. This is a Safe Harbor Front slide, one of two Safe Harbor Statement slides included in this template. One of the Safe Harbor slides must be used if your presentation covers material affected by Oracle’s Revenue Recognition Policy To learn more about this policy, e-mail: Revrec-americasiebc_us@oracle.com For internal communication, Safe Harbor Statements are not required. However, there is an applicable disclaimer (Exhibit E) that should be used, found in the Oracle Revenue Recognition Policy for Future Product Communications. Copy and paste this link into a web browser, to find out more information. http://my.oracle.com/site/fin/gfo/GlobalProcesses/cnt452504.pdf For all external communications such as press release, roadmaps, PowerPoint presentations, Safe Harbor Statements are required. You can refer to the link mentioned above to find out additional information/disclaimers required depending on your audience.
  3. JEP104
  4. JEP 155 Completion based design. Multiple threads getting stalled by one thread. The way round this is to basically pass on the work from a thread that is waiting to the one doing the work. The waiting thread is then free to be reused.
  5. JEP103
  6. JEP150 Internal storage using just the offset in nanosecods from the Epoch. Things like day and date, etc calculated on demand to improve efficiency. Partial, e.g. March 20th (no year). Not specific Duration (nanos), period (minutes, days, etc), interval nanos between two points in time.
  7. JEP 184
  8. Modularisation of the Java platform. Since project Jigsaw was pushed back to Java SE 9 some form of modularisation was needed to make the Java platform more flexible. To do this we now have three compact profiles that subset the standard class libraries to allow applications that only need certain APIs to run in a smaller resource footprint. Compact 1 is the smallest subset of packages that supports the Java language. Includes logging and SSL. This is the migration path for people currently using the compact device configuration (CDC) Compact 2 adds support for XML, JDBC and RMI (specifically JSR 280, JSR 169 and JSR 66) Compact 3 adds management, naming, more securoty and compiler support. None of the compact profiles include any UI APIs, they are all headless. See also JEP 161
  9. JEP 174
  10. JEP 173
  11. JEP 122
  12. Fluent API Monad
  13. Question: how are we going to get there with real collections?
  14. We define a Lambda expression as an anonymous function (like a method, but because it is not associated with a class we call it a function). Like methods there are parameters, a body, a return type and even thrown exceptions. What Lambda expressions really brings to Java is a simple way to parameterise behaviour. The sequence of methods we have here defines what we want to do, i.e. filter the stream, map its values and so on, but how this happens is defined by the Lambda expressions we pass as parameters.
  15. Erased function types are the worst of both worlds
  16. Current fashion: imagine the libraries you want, then build the language features to suit But, are we explicit enough that this is what we're doing? This is hard because lead times on language work are longer than on libraries So temptation is to front-load language work and let libraries slide We should always be prepared to answer: why *these* language features?
  17. Can also say “default none” to reabstract the method
  18. Start talking about how this is a VM feature
  19. Stream is an interface, but in Java SE 8 we can now have static methods in interfaces, hence Stream.of() Files.walk will walk a file tree from a given Path argument Spliterator interface that represents an object for traversing or partitioning elements of a source