I love hearing about new Java features while still being stuck on Java 8.
@jayshartzer844 Жыл бұрын
Kotlin can give you those features even on Java 8 😉
@VonCarlsson Жыл бұрын
@@jayshartzer844 Good luck convincing Java developers using it, though. They're drawn to boiler plate and terrible type systems like moths to a flame.
@Mglunafh Жыл бұрын
Working in banking?
@dargkkast6469 Жыл бұрын
@@Fiercesoulkingwhat's wrong with openJDK?
@waltwhite8126 Жыл бұрын
same LMAO
@gavinh7845 Жыл бұрын
8:30 - It lets you do pattern matching similar to rust. It turns the interface into a tagged union.
@robrick9361 Жыл бұрын
Java really has gone full circle. 🤣🤣🤣
@Bliss467 Жыл бұрын
they're basically sealed classes in kotlin, but they're interfaces so more applicable. but at the same time, kotlin can autocast stuff for you, and its when expression doesn't need a subject, so it has no need for its sealed keyword to be applicable to interfaces, where it barely even makes sense. also java already has enum classes, which are a tagged union, which are a more concise version of this, as far as i can tell.
@Satook Жыл бұрын
Yup. Sealed class hierarchy instead of a tagged union type. The use cases are the same as rust enums when you need a limited, limited set of shapes with some compiler help around completeness at usage sites. They just made it awkward as by having the interface have to forward declare its children. Probably so they can put it into the byte-code and enforce it at runtime. AFAIK each class compiled to a seperate loadable unit. Each is essentially an island in the JVM.
@kyay10 Жыл бұрын
@@Bliss467Kotlin has sealed interfaces, and they're a lot lot nicer. Remember that you can only inherit from one class, but from multiple interfaces, and that carries over to multiple sealed interfaces
@jongeduard10 ай бұрын
Five months later I am watching this again now. Discriminated unions are currently a really high requested feature by many people in C# too. I guess chances are pretty large that a similar approach to this will be done for C# as well. Simply limit your inheritance options, so that you can do exhaustive pattern matting. Voila. This also matches with F# quite well which is compiled into a set of classes in a similar fashion. And this matters if people want both dotnet languages be able to work together very well. This approach has probably also the least interference with existing design patterns in OOP style languages. But silently I like actual Rust style enums more, which are more concise. Sometimes conciseness is not the only consideration however, so you have to fall back to existing language elements and improve those instead.
Жыл бұрын
Virtual threads remove the "color" of the functions, the same function could be blocking or not depending on where it runs, and that is amazing. There are no "async", "suspend", "callbacks" ...
@nviorres Жыл бұрын
Yep, he missed the whole point.
@lhxperimental Жыл бұрын
What does color mean here?
@CYXXYC Жыл бұрын
@@lhxperimental google function coloring
@hellowill7 ай бұрын
It's great they didn't give into the async await garbage
@luisdanielmesa5 ай бұрын
In java there are no colors for Runnables.
@Sam-cy2mv Жыл бұрын
I worked at Google, everything was Java 8. I worked at Amazon... hell i worked on some stuff that was still Java 7. Both of those teams worked on core services. Java is proof that the syntactic sugar that devs get hyped about means very little, the value of a language is in its stability over the long haul
@SXsoft99 Жыл бұрын
It just means they locked certain libs for specific versions since java does all it can to be backwards compatible Syntactic sugar it usually ment to reduce the amount of code you write to make it more readable and faster to write while doing the same thing under the hood when the code is compiled
@benm1295 Жыл бұрын
I feel you. I just quit a job, because they still used java.util.Calendar all over the place. And they were so proud they just recently switched to Java 8. It’s just embarrassing when you know what modern Java actually looks and feels like.
@SimonBuchanNz Жыл бұрын
Java is proof that enterprises are completely unable to identify opportunity costs.
@AlejandroAndraca Жыл бұрын
That's what i don't get it, the very things the people use like KZbin are written mostly in java but everyone says that is old, bad and no one is using it.
@SimonBuchanNz Жыл бұрын
@@AlejandroAndraca KZbin servers are written (mostly) in python.
@benderbg Жыл бұрын
That's the whole point of Java, slow and steady and the reason why enterprise loves it so much. Ecosystem built on top of it solves all the business problems. You dont have to relearn 30% of language each year just because hot and popular languages like to bloat themselves with each new release. Constant changes and features != stability.
@theohallenius8882 Жыл бұрын
They do love their zero day vulnerabilities for sure
@Fiercesoulking Жыл бұрын
Its right most of the companies stay with what they have and Java is a nice enterprise language. Javas problem besides the license stuff from Oracle. Is the whole framework madness for lack of better words. They built frameworks on top of frameworks on top of frameworks. Mostly all of things settled on Spring Boots which is also just a meta framework. There a 3 reasons why this is so bad . 1 You have the broken virtual class problem finding the bug is super hard and can be caused by anyone in the chain who updated his product which also result in a very slow update process. 2. Java is the programming language with the most dependency injection vectors including this . other are Maven or now worse Gradle 3. Back then those people who could handel this were called JEE devs and made 30% to 50% more then the other devs which is a negativ for a company.
@Adowrath Жыл бұрын
@@Fiercesoulking Can we please agree to stop using the word "meta-framework"? It's completely meaningless. Also, "Dependency injection vectors"? "Maven or now worse Gradle"?
@ColossalMcBuzz Жыл бұрын
@@JohnyS113 This is about Java, not JavaScript, so != is correct.
@ruslooob Жыл бұрын
@@Fiercesoulkingyou talking tottally bullshit about spring boot ecosystem. I Working java developer several years and i never met with problem in you comments. Even i use java 17+ versions every day. Java frameworks are awesome and there is no programming languages which has even close to spring boot (mb c#, but it also java).
@fischi9129 Жыл бұрын
honestly, I think most people when they think of java, they think about how they feel while using it, but truth being told, I think for an enterprise, java is one of the best languages out there. It's stable, it has tons of support, it generally is less verbose than people make it to be and most importantly, it's quite consistent on how you can resolve an issue. If you open 50 classes, 80-90% of them look exactly the same. If I get a node express server for instance, I'm pretty sure that on 10 projects I'll have 15 different implementations (which is not bad per se, but if you need to switch out the people who work on it somewhat regularly that's bad)
@master0fnone Жыл бұрын
100% agree, the dullness when using it 10x makes up the ease of development when you're in a team. Also Spring Boot.
@LiveErrors Жыл бұрын
It's like Angular, except angular isn't behind on features
@CakeIsALie99 Жыл бұрын
It's got a stable amount of zero day vulnerabilities
@masterchief1520 Жыл бұрын
That's why I stopped with Java. Trying with Go. I already like it .
@fischi9129 Жыл бұрын
@@LiveErrors java pretty much has everything you need and want as of today honestly. Also, most of the stuff in the video is in the langiage since 3 years, also, metaprogramming is best out there pretty much.
@nviorres Жыл бұрын
Fair enough but you are missing the point of Loom. They didn't just implement green threads, they did it while keeping compatibility with the language's existing Thread/Concurrency/blocking APIs. That's a significant achievement IMO.
@helderneres Жыл бұрын
Java being Java... Focused on Enterprise.
@lennarth.6214 Жыл бұрын
This feels like when a child gives you a drawing and you have to act as if you like it. Except the child is almost 30 and you hate it
@invinciblemode Жыл бұрын
I audibly laughed at this comment
@zxph Жыл бұрын
Java being the oddball trying to fit in with the cool kids, except now that 30 years have passed it just gives off Steve Buscemi "how do you do fellow kids" vibes
@arijitgogoi7351 Жыл бұрын
ThePrimeTime is exposed.
@echoptic775 Жыл бұрын
Prime is actually 37.
@kingdomhearts45Th Жыл бұрын
Java is chris chan
@KoboldAdvocate Жыл бұрын
As a forced java dev, it's nice to see Java catching up to C#
@petrzurek5713 Жыл бұрын
You might be even be able to use it at your organization ... in like 20 years when they catch up with this version 😁😁
@daycred Жыл бұрын
Why? It's not like you're gonna write anything newer than 11 for the next 20 years
@KoboldAdvocate Жыл бұрын
@daycred I dont mean to brag but we just upgraded to 17
@JosifovGjorgi Жыл бұрын
@@petrzurek5713 well, there is an interesting development Oracle sells support plans. If the company don't upgrade then they have to pay Oracle for support. If they don't pay Oracle for support and they operate in EU then when they are hacked and during the hack there is leak personal information, EU can impose penalties up to 4% of last year profits If ain't broke don't fix it doesn't work any more
@Gahlfe123 Жыл бұрын
@@KoboldAdvocatelmaoo
@CallMeKeule Жыл бұрын
sealed interfaces really work well for ADTs (Algebraic Data Types) as well as messaging interfaces, where you want to have a determined (closed) protocol of message types.
@tobiasjohansson3542 Жыл бұрын
Or phases of a state machine
@RhysMorgan11 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's basically the same as ADTs, but it's perhaps the clunkiest way they could have gone about it. Why not borrow from Rust or Swift and just have enums with associated values? It's a much cleaner, clearer way of writing an ADT.
@KangoV9 күн бұрын
@@RhysMorgan You need to see where they are going with the type system. Primitive types will soon be first class. Value types, inline types. Can soon use the ! for nullability etc etc. Loads of stuff incoming, but a LOT of groundwork is being laid down.
@sinom Жыл бұрын
While this says "Java 21" this is actually a list of a bunch of features that have been added between Java 8 (the last LTS version most people were using) and Java 21 (the at the time of writing newest version)
@CYXXYC Жыл бұрын
not sure why they mentioned multiline strings and enhanced switch, but pattern matching and virtual threads are 21
@gileee Жыл бұрын
Good thing since companies using Java still haven't even adopted 11
@dylansperrer1300 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the improved instanceof implementation is from Java 17 iirc
@gontsaru Жыл бұрын
No, it's a list of features between Java 18 and 20. Java 17 was the last LTS release.
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
@@gontsaru Well, the only current LTS versions is 11. Extended support for 17 and 21 ends before that for 11 ends ... One should NOT buy the LTS moniker as Oracle uses it. Support for 17 even ends before 8! There would be more enterprises adopting a newer version than 8 or 11 if Oracle would actually commit to it ...
@renatocustodio1000 Жыл бұрын
This article didn't really show how awesome loom is. It's way better than pretty much everything else in other ecosystems.
@benm1295 Жыл бұрын
In general I agree, but still they could (and should) improve the syntax. Having some kind of async await that automatically uses virtual threads could make it a serious nobrainer. Don’t get me wrong: I really love the feature with all its possibilities. I just wish there was some really simple stupid syntactic sugar (I call it the SSSS principle) for the most common use cases.
@WilsonSilva90 Жыл бұрын
Better than Elixir processes, which are also lightweight, self-contained and *supervisable*?
@nviorres Жыл бұрын
@@benm1295 the whole point of virtual threads is to get the performance of async await with regular, blocking like APIs.
@mikeswierczek Жыл бұрын
Really? How is it better than coroutines in dozens of other languages? My prediction: it's a good feature for teams already using the JVM, but it won't move the needle on performance benchmarks enough to convince anyone using Go or Rust to switch.
@nviorres Жыл бұрын
@@mikeswierczek Who said about convincing anyone using Go or Rust to switch? I never said that, I said "the whole point of virtual threads is to get the performance of async await with regular, blocking like APIs". Do you agree that the async/await syntax vs lack of constitutes an important semantic difference or not?
@CheaterCodes Жыл бұрын
The sealed classes are basically the equivalent to tagged unions; you would use them like you would use enums in Rust. Since this isn't really OOP, it feels out of place in java, but I honestly really enjoy it whenever I'm forced to use Java. Integer divides can overflow: A signed byte is between -128 and +127 (inclusive). Therefore, dividing -128 by -1 results in an overflow.
@ThePrimeTimeagen Жыл бұрын
yeah... but the having to invert specify ... that is wild
@CheaterCodes Жыл бұрын
That's why I compare it to rust enums, which do the same.
@Fiercesoulking Жыл бұрын
@@ThePrimeTimeagen Yeah its surprising but I see it as a tool for the software architect and his UML tools. Records are on a similar line with this.
@Crow-EH Жыл бұрын
I for example use it for my kafka consumers: A sealed interface KafkaMessage with a "type()" getter and other common message property getters, bunch of records implementing it inside, with different properties (the permits is implicit in this case since the records are declared inside), and smart deserialization based on type's value (with Jackson's @JsonSubTypes). Then I can have my handler receive KafkaMessages directly and switch on it with pattern matching (was already available in java 17 behind a flag) or not, and even switch on it later for other operations. It could have just been OOP instead (basically a KafkaMessage::handle method to override, instead of sealed+switch), it's just nice to have the option to have basically an enumeration of implementations that i can easily switch on safely, and it's sometimes a better approach, like if you have multiple operations depending on the implementation with common behaviour for some types depending on the operations and don't want to end up in an overkill OOP pattern to DRY that a junior dev (or you in two months) will take 2 days to understand: just switch on it instead when you need to, directly in your "main" logic code, imperative or functional. It's part of the effort to have less OOP and more functional code since java 8 and I like it. Well it's basically Java catching up to Kotlin, which is still the best jvm language IMO.
@asdqwe4427 Жыл бұрын
Scala does it in a very, very similar way and has done so forever. I really don’t see how it’s any weirder than using enums for it
@yeshengwei79 Жыл бұрын
No doubt you are a good programmer. However, it seems your attitude in analyzing Java 21 is not that serious and very biased since before reading the article. And to be honest, although you had used Java for sometime, I don't think you know Java so well now. I started with C & C++, and then switched to Java since JDK 1.4.1. In recent few years, I learnt Go, JavaScript, TypeScript, and Rust. Well, Rust is a very powerful programming language with a lot of good new concepts. However, for my new server-side e-Commerce Big Data Analysis project, I still chose Java because I consider it the best choice after comparing with all the other languages I mentioned above. If my project is an Operating System, a Real-time System, or a hardware related application, then, I will probably choose Rust. Even though Java code is a bit longer than Go or Rust with boilerplates, in my point of view, it's the easiest to read and manage language for large-scale enterprice application development among members of a big team. With modern IDEs (e.g. IntelliJ IDEA), a longer code with boilerplates does not cause longer time to write at all. In your video, you hardly spent any time in analyzing the Virtual Threads (and did not cover Structured Concurrency at all), which for me are the most attractive 2 features in Java 21.
@toby99996 ай бұрын
I've been developing in C and C++ for 30 years. Trying to learn java for the past decade and getting nowhere with it is blowing my mind in a very bad way. It sucks.
@yeshengwei796 ай бұрын
@@toby9999 Java is faaaar simpler and easier than C++. Which features blowed your mind?
@ronbuchanan54323 ай бұрын
Exactly. What's up with this guy? This is the first video of this channel that I'm watching and I stopped after a few minutes to scroll the comments. This video feels so unprofessional as he scrolls the article and reacts like a kid. Be humble
@loic.bertrand Жыл бұрын
Some of the examples given here are quite bad in my opinion ^^ 1:04 You don't need to use stripLeading() with text blocks, leading spaces are already stripped by the compiler. 2:41 They only put one field in the first record example, a better example would be `record Person(String name, LocalDate birthday) {}`. 12:46 I don't know why they've put a separate instanceof above the switch... 20:39 You don't need to nest try-with-resource statements, you can declare multiple resources inside the parentheses.
@nerminkarapandzic5176 Жыл бұрын
thank the lord someone commented this, I was going mad...
@DAB009 Жыл бұрын
Hi. Please can you post something. I would like to read. No issues if you cant though. Have a great day
@nerminkarapandzic5176 Жыл бұрын
Did you get offended by this or am I reading this wrong?
@emaayan Жыл бұрын
As prime said java has been around for decades ,used by large organizations and being rock solid stable , so hearing people hapring about "oh this was on this languae for years" is getting pretty dull, the size of organizations here won't be impressed with syntax sugar here or there as long as the thing runs and works.
@TheMohawk36 Жыл бұрын
Sealed interfaces are really useful for cases where e.g. you are creating a library with a bunch of types that you do not want to expose to the user (e.g. just for the sake of simplifying the library's interface for users). So, you can expose an interface instead which your 'internal' types implement. But, your library might still be dependent on the specific implementations to behave a certain way, and there is no way to restrict the interface to force implementers to honor the contract (simple example: a method should always return a positive int). In other words: This interface is not meant to be implemented by random users. To show that the interface is not intended to be implemented, and to prevent weird issues where a user implements the interface but does something crazy which breaks your library code, you can make the interface sealed and only permit your library's own types to implement it. The bi-directional dependency might seem weird, but sealed types are really only meant to be used within a unit of control. e.g. a module/package or within a class (for nested classes the 'permits' clause is not even required)
@ronbuchanan54323 ай бұрын
Great explanation - Kudos
@heeerrresjonny11 ай бұрын
Java's slower pace at adopting some things is kind of a benefit tbh. It can sit back, wait until something catches on, then add it while remaining stable & consistent. You don't want to add something to Java only to have it fall out of favor in a year because then you end up either having to maintain support for this thing almost no one is using (creating more opportunity for bugs, vulnerabilities, etc...) or you end up breaking a bunch of stuff when you deprecate it and rip it out of the language.
@ITSecNEO4 ай бұрын
What a L take lol 😂 So what is of you really want and need the feature, you have to wait years for it to come to Java. It just sucks, fact.
@Jebusankel Жыл бұрын
The nested trys at 21:30 aren't necessary. A try-with-resources block can handle multiple resources. Also try-with-resources isn't remotely new, it's been there since Java 7. The first part of the article that mentioned it was just about the HttpClient class implementing it, which is weird because that came out in Java 11.
@vinothmanoharan6111 Жыл бұрын
Java's ubiquity and speed, especially compared to other garbage-collected languages, make it noteworthy. Go (Golang) is the only other garbage-collected language that rivals Java's pace. Modern Java, with features like Virtual Threads and GraalVM for native executables, is impressively cool. Embrace different languages based on their merits and fit for your specific use case. Stay language-agnostic and choose what solves your problem effectively.
@countbrappcula Жыл бұрын
Spoke like a true corporate towing shill
@Y-JA Жыл бұрын
Even though it started as a ripoff of Java, C# is today way ahead of it in nearly every aspect and its iteration cycles are significantly faster. So yeah I don't buy into your Java and Go exceptionalism. There are plenty other languages.
@lucass8119 Жыл бұрын
@@Y-JA Fair, but microsoft really shit the bed with C# and .NET. Making it tightly coupled to the windows and microsoft ecosystem was a mistake. Many corps can't make such a big commitment, nor do they want to spend the exorbitant amount of money. Because its all one big package... you're not just purchasing .NET, you're purchasing dozens of things. Things are changing now - but too little too late. .NET was never an option for those who use Linux backends, and due to the historical momentum it'll stay that way.
@theshermantanker704311 ай бұрын
@@Y-JAlmfao C# is way slower than Java since the CLR is significantly less optimized than the JVM
@lufenmartofilia58049 ай бұрын
@@theshermantanker7043and people keep saying that java "catchs up" but it's more that they add things when they make sense. Java 22+ plans to integrate LINQ while C# tries now to copy java virtual threads. Which make as of today, java way more scalable then C# for concurrent app. I find it really impressive to be able to spawn 10M virtual threads that has solved the issue of context switching.
@andrebrait Жыл бұрын
Sealed types allow you to code for them, externally, as a single thing, and make them publicly available, while also restricting external users from creating - and passing in- their own implementations. Basically, it's "nice" to have enum types that can also do things normal classes can do (like inheritance) and use that internally in SDKs, libraries and frameworks. It also gives you a way to scan the class hierarchy downwards without scanning or anything of the sort, which is great for implementing enums that must have different typing but e.g. unique key values within a given context, which you can then easily check at startup/unit tests.
@dwarfman78 Жыл бұрын
those features smell like antipattern to me as they are agains the lisp substitution principle i was taught a long time ago... it is smelly.
@yami_the_witch Жыл бұрын
okay but like, you can just make the interface private. if the user shouldn't implement a interface they prolly don't have a reason to query after it
@freeideas Жыл бұрын
You guys are vastly underestimating the coolness of virtual threads. This gives us the efficiency of async/await without the complexity. With async/await, you have to say something like, "tell B to call C when B is done, tell A to call B when A is done". In java, you can just say "do A, then do B, then do C", and get the same performance.
@lufenmartofilia58049 ай бұрын
Absolutely this. + you can spawn millions of VTs without performance loss of in context switching / pauses, or even ram usage
@freeideas9 ай бұрын
@@lufenmartofilia5804 Right! It is much better than async/await because code execution is a straight line; no promises no "then" methods. To be fair, though, per-virtual-thread ram usage is not zero, but neither is node.js async/await.
@lufenmartofilia58049 ай бұрын
@@freeideas right but when a platform thread cost 1mb, a vt cost only 1kb. Which is totally marginal on 99% of scenarios haha 😁
@RandomHandle1207 ай бұрын
The whole point of async/await is to avoid the nightmare of nested code. Java's virtual threads do not even try to address this code readability issue that has been plaguing the language from the start.
@freeideas7 ай бұрын
@@RandomHandle120 Virtual threads is a 100% solution for the code readability problem of async/await. All you have to do is write old-fashioned blocking code, the way we did before async/await existed, and then under the hood it does the equivalent of async/await.
@Bolpat Жыл бұрын
10:45 You missed the whole idea of this. Java still has so-called open interfaces (those that you all know); they added the sealed ones to give devs a new thing in design space: It allows exhaustive switch statements; it’s a lot like enum conceptually, except that enums only has fixed objects . When you add another Animal, you want to update the switch statements. You have to update the _Animal_ interface so the switch notices that something is missing.
@EDToasty Жыл бұрын
The reason that switch pattern matching requires sealed interfaces (with permits) is because it's not always possible to know, at compile time, how many possible implementations of the interface will exist. Switch expressions must be exhaustive. For example, if you are the author of a library that switches on an interface object, allowing consumers of the library to implement the interface may cause issues with the already compiled switch expression.
@davidfrischknecht8261 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that what the "default" case is for?
@alathreon8315 Жыл бұрын
For the sealed types, it's basically exactly the same as Rust enums. Instead of improving the current java enums (they tried and failed), they instead modified the interfaces.
@CYXXYC Жыл бұрын
the way they tried to improve current java enums it was still about those constant fields with methods, rather than sum types
@HrHaakon Жыл бұрын
Enums in Java are already good. Good is not defined as "whatever rust does this week"
@manaslovesbirds Жыл бұрын
LMAO you tried and failed, not Java.
@megaing1322 Жыл бұрын
rust misusing the term enums because they didn't dare use sum types is honestly really annoying. There is an almost complete disconnect between what everyone else means with enum and what rust means, and honestly, everyone else is correct.
@ivanjermakov Жыл бұрын
They're handcuffed by backwards compartibility. So it's either come up with a new synax for data types or double down on records (I hate permits idea btw).
@erickmoya1401 Жыл бұрын
The worst part is that enterprises will not update their java version. Meaning this is good for at most 5 devs who managed to update java without their 20 QA noticing after 3 months of review.
@masterchief15205 ай бұрын
Enterprises care more about stability than your opinion. People complain about lack of features. Java implements some good features albeit late and inspired by other languages. People still complain . It promotes new software to potentially use those new fancy features. It's LTS. Java is to enterprise backend what C is to systems programming. Don't understand what you're waffling about. You can still continue to not use what you don't want 😂.
@awesomedavid2012 Жыл бұрын
The point of sealed interfaces is algebraic data types. Imagine a Result type or an Option type. The idea that "you have to come up here and modify it when you add new things" is nonsense because it isn't really an "interface". You aren't modifying it pretty much ever. You are creating one type with specific implementations
@jongeduard10 ай бұрын
Records as well, which the product types. Minor nitpic, sorry. But my impression is that many people explain it incorrectly. The term ADT is the general term for both product types and sum types. These sealed interfaces are the sum types. Most functional programming languages call them tagged unions or discriminated unions. Some languages, such as Rust, call them enums.
@rochaaraujo9320 Жыл бұрын
20y working with Java, I'm having a affair with go now. I could say that java 11 is enough for the 99% of cases and i love it. Yes, I said java 11. Just write good code, don't blame the language.
@SimonBuchanNz Жыл бұрын
Or in other words, I would like to write *less* good code, please.
@antongorov5275 Жыл бұрын
"Just write good code, don't blame the language." That what I told my students after they failed to write binary search in brainfuck.
@snorman19119 ай бұрын
Most of the problems with Java are the over complications Enterprisey devs create. We have a huge big data processing app in Java and I don't think we have s single Factory, let alone a Factory Factory, or a Java doc that contains nothing but 500 class definitions and no comments.
@therealest455 ай бұрын
@@snorman1911 Every tool has this issue in enterprise. It's just a bad place to work.
@enriqueisaacs8181 Жыл бұрын
Im a learner learning java atm and while I too dislike java, I feel like my skills in java has grown quite a lot over the years. I cant tell whether its writing in java that's fun or if I just love Object Orientated Programming, but right now I'm glad java is evolving as I'm still learning it_
@Ellefsen97 Жыл бұрын
I can relate to your experience. Java was the first language I learned in depth at College. I enjoyed it a lot which I didn’t expect considering all of the hatred for the language. But now that I’ve learned a bit of C#, I see that what I enjoyed with Java was the OOP paradigm and not really the language itself. C#, to me, is essentially all the things I liked about Java without all the things I didn’t like
@mahe4 Жыл бұрын
wait till you use c# for the second time. the first time is weird, coming from java, but the second time, you won't believe what is possible nowadays.
@FlaggedStar Жыл бұрын
Java is a very thin layer of abstraction over its OOP. It's hard to have any opinion at all on Java without it actually being an opinion on its approach to OOP. You like the OOP.
@Ellefsen97 Жыл бұрын
@@FlaggedStar This is a very good way of putting it
@y4lnux Жыл бұрын
@@Ellefsen97 kind of agree, my problem with C# was Microsoft , then Oracle acquired Java and I stop caring , after I discovered CoreNet, I still program in Java or Python, or JS depending the project
@KX36 Жыл бұрын
I go back and forth between preferring 4 spaces vs 1 tab... but I don't usually change my mind twice in a single line of code.
@redpepper7411 ай бұрын
There was actually a method to it, there were 8 spaces for a line continuation and 4 spaces for a new scope. Their paren spacing sucks though, all-around ew.
@thingsiplay Жыл бұрын
The most impressive thing to me is, how you in the end of the video try to talk not too bad about the language; and succeed. Pretty impressive.
@caspera3193 Жыл бұрын
The JVM ecosystem is the only thing that makes the language interesting IMO. I'm strongly considering to learn both Scala and Kotlin.
@Lemmy4555 Жыл бұрын
jvm is overrated, you can get multiplatform with go easily.
@zhamed9587 Жыл бұрын
@@Lemmy4555 The JVM is far more than for just supporting multiple platforms. You get a runtime that supports multiple languages, excellent JIT compiler, excellent GCs (far better than golang's), second to none introspection and observability capability, etc.
@lhxperimental Жыл бұрын
Tip: JVM languages like Scala, Kotlin, Groovy etc are experiments. The best parts from these languages are absorbed into Java after being battle tested and found useful for years. This curation process is why Java seems to move slow but it really helps keep the core clean. Scala was hot a decade ago now it's Kotlin. Google is pushing Kotlin for Android as it does not want Oracle to sue it in future. Don't get swayed so easily, there is value in a stable language.
@Lemmy4555 Жыл бұрын
@@zhamed9587 that's true, they don't have to reinvent the wheel everytime, but some of these takes are mitigated or fully handled by using LLVM like Rust and Julia does.
@zhamed9587 Жыл бұрын
@@lhxperimental Yep, Java remains the platform language, and they're really utilizing the last mover advantage which I really like.
@theohallenius8882 Жыл бұрын
Have to give them props for adding multiline strings after like a decades after nearly every language in existence has one.
@alessioantinoro5713 Жыл бұрын
Those have been added 3 years ago
@007arek Жыл бұрын
I feel that in java it's not so useful.
@iceinvein Жыл бұрын
@@007arekuseful when you're templating without having to use library like mustache and with new string interpolation in java life gets slightly easier
@007arek Жыл бұрын
@@iceinvein This was my point, not too many ppl do that. I have to add, that new java has string template that is better than simple string interpolation.
@MrBran4 Жыл бұрын
Is it worth it with all the enterprise developers still clinging to Java 8 with their grey pinstripe claws?
@alessioantinoro5713 Жыл бұрын
Their problems lol, the language offers backwards compatibilty. (The only problem is passing from 8 to 10, then it's all going downhill)
@boredbytrash Жыл бұрын
We don’t want to clinge to Java8… but all the stupid dependencies on 20 years old dependencies that no one has a clue about forces is to
@Fiercesoulking Жыл бұрын
@@boredbytrash Like I said in the other comments this comes from framework stacking which is one thing which killed Javas momentum.
@alessioantinoro5713 Жыл бұрын
@@boredbytrash I guess it would be a great spring cleaning
@Sam-cy2mv Жыл бұрын
@alessioantinoro5713 My team is stuck on Java 8 forever. We don't want to be here
@mintx1720 Жыл бұрын
That's 20 versions ahead of rust, and 21 versions ahead of most rust crates. GJ java.
@banatibor83 Жыл бұрын
20 years older too.
@metaltyphoon Жыл бұрын
@@banatibor83The joke and you rubbed shoulders and you just kept walking
@metaltyphoon Жыл бұрын
AkShUallY its 1.21 so its 52 versions behind Rust
@vytah Жыл бұрын
@@metaltyphoon They dropped the 1.x numbering starting with Java 9. Which broke programs that looked at only at the minor version. Then Java 10 broke programs that compared versions as strings. Also, more confusingly, "Java 2" refers to any Java between 1.2 and 1.5.
@masterchief15205 ай бұрын
20m softwares. 21m jobs too 😂
@plnmbjj Жыл бұрын
it would be cool to see you digging deeper on why other languages already have something in terms of performance for what virtual threads are bringing to the java world. buuuut, the real thing that the java community is excited about that this article did not mention is that it will let devs write java code in a blocking style, with the benefits of non-blocking to reduce having to deal with futures, completable futures, reactive programming and all the good stuff that drive every java dev nuts when we need to do parallelism. I wonder if any language allow that? without having to do something similar to async/await everywhere
@SXsoft99 Жыл бұрын
Have to love that java gets new versions, now if only companies would use them 🤣 Also i like how oracle made java less verbose in some things but give you extra tools to add more abstraction and verbosity
@zhamed9587 Жыл бұрын
What extra tools?
@CYXXYC Жыл бұрын
you can see prime absolutely hated reading this article because it was about java even though these changes make it pretty much a different language at this point. i wonder if a rebrand would fix anything...
@ricmorris9758 Жыл бұрын
J# may be? 😂
@ghassanalkaraan Жыл бұрын
@@ricmorris9758 Java ++
@paulstaszko31 Жыл бұрын
Is the unicode letter x available? That'd be a good new name...
@Mglunafh Жыл бұрын
Java topics don't generate drama at social networks, so probably no chance hooking up with modern kids even after rebranding
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
Java needs no rebranding as its the only mature language anyway (besides Fortran and C). Kids will find out soon enough ;)
@pif5023 Жыл бұрын
This is uplifting, I will likely switch team and I will be using Java 21. I hope is actually better than the Java 8 I left. Tired of TS/JS on big projects. It has become as tiring as Java. Unfortunately in EU Go is still not as used, especially in my country.
@Mglunafh Жыл бұрын
It will be better, mate. It's almost a decade since java 8 release, there are lots of improvements in the jvm internals, new garbage collectors, higher pace of introducing quality of life changes
@Ewig_Luftenglanz Жыл бұрын
You Will enjoy it, writing code in java 8 and Java 21 (using the new features) it's almost as writing in 2 totally different languages. Writing in java 21 feels almost like coding in JS but without the totally idiotic and detach from reality implicit casting Javascript does with types in order to call itself "dynamic" and without the spaghetti code they get with the super nested functions and callbacks.
@shadeblackwolf15087 ай бұрын
The reason for sealed classes is this: often a library will expose an interface, and static factories to create instances. we do not want the customer to be creating those instances. This mechanism allows that.
@StephenBuergler Жыл бұрын
23:00 Virtual threads are nothing like setTimeout.
@gianglaodai107 Жыл бұрын
The sealed type make me feel like Java want to have Sum Type from Functional Programming. Java from OOP become more FP now
@asdqwe4427 Жыл бұрын
It’s real similar to how Scala does it
@Skaiiur Жыл бұрын
I love programming in general and because it's my first language i love Java. Especially because of new release train, and new(for Java) cool(for Java) features
@magnusahlden7087 Жыл бұрын
I still love java. I've worked professionally with python, objective-c, swift, java-jr^H^Hscript and others and nothing beats the stability and maintainability of Java. it just beats everything. commence flamewars.
@EdmondDantèsDE Жыл бұрын
hating on java is just a cringe meme that is self-perpetuating. who gives a crap about syntactic sugar? it's nice but it certainly doesn't outweigh the ecosystem which is Java's strong point.
@MrMatthewLayton11 ай бұрын
Sealed interfaces (another thing stolen from Kotlin) are useful in certain contexts. It's not about "we don't know who's going to implement it", rather it's about "We want to control the implementations, but we don't know which of those impls someone is going to pass via LSP"
@humbertovlopez8643 Жыл бұрын
Creates an interface... deny access to all clases, aint much but is honest work
@boredbytrash Жыл бұрын
As always, these very technical-illiterate bloggers have no clue what they’re talking about. The classic „dog cat animal“ example for interfaces, lol…
@vytah Жыл бұрын
That could become a nice way for defining phantom types. The shortest way to define an uninstantiatable type.
@jongxina35959 ай бұрын
Loom wasnt shown off properly but basically its the same as async/await javascript/rust but without having to put async/await. Some internal differences ofc with Rust still being more efficient, but thats the idea of loom.
@shedontlove8490 Жыл бұрын
Great update that no one will be using anytime soon in the enterprise.
@faizhalde63910 ай бұрын
A note on the sealed interface & permit. Perhaps the whole point of sealed is that you know what the classes are going to be extending it upfront or is in your control. Looking at the way Scala does it, sealed interface can only be extended by classes in the same file, at-least with permit you get to split them into their own files. I think by the very nature of calling something as "sealed", the compiler has to be hinted somehow on what can extend it ( either by convention such as having them in "same file" or the way Java does using "permit" ), without that sealed interface would be a brick
@Edvardas3643 Жыл бұрын
I am happy, that java provides a stable job. I still recommend to learn it for new programmers just because of job security.
@benm1295 Жыл бұрын
It’s also a really simple language. There isn’t much special syntax. 99% of the code you read does exactly what it looks like. I don’t have to think when looking at other peoples Java code. That’s what I really love about it (and of course the huge ecosystem). It’s really hard to f*ck up Java code. I consider this a feature.
@danvilela Жыл бұрын
@@benm1295yeah just create a factory to create a class that creates another class that has dependency injection so that we can get the other factory and then sum up two values :) does everything expected 🤦🏻♂️
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
@@benm1295 I agree but I have seen a fair chunk of unreadable Java code. If people really try .... But agreed, ideomatic Java is a pleasure to read.
@ahuramazda9202 Жыл бұрын
Java: When humans cannot understand something, they become hostile towards it. Do not be upset by their attacks, fear their lack of understanding. My power lies in the peace and mental security that I provide to my lovers, not in creating controversy and making noise.
@floppypaste Жыл бұрын
You need to take a look at Kotlin. The only thing bad about it is the lack of Exception/Errors as values in the std lib.
@jamesgibson1893 Жыл бұрын
That gradle and a lack of an LSP but it's a great language and think it could change Primes view of DSLs
@shykial_ Жыл бұрын
What do you mean by Exceptions/Errors as values? Exceptions have their types so they can be used as values as everything else
@floppypaste Жыл бұрын
@@shykial_ they are types yes but not really used as values. A functions signature in Kotlin doesn't tell you that it could go wrong, neither what could go wrong. In that sense, even Java is better then Kotlin. Another alternative are result types like you see in Rust which is referred to as "errors as values" afaik.
@floppypaste Жыл бұрын
@@jamesgibson1893Yeah Kotlins DSL can be really strong if used in the right places. What's the Problem with Gradle though? (I originally came from maven, npm and pip (absolute nightmare) so my standards might be too low)
@shykial_ Жыл бұрын
@@floppypaste you can always use @Throws annotation to indicate function may throw some exception, but if exception is one common outcome of a function which you would like to enforce handling straight away than why not use Result type or something else like Arrow's Either type? I personally am not a fan of Java's checked Exceptions and to me using Result/Either makes much more sense when you would like the caller to handle exception case directly
@clementdato6328 Жыл бұрын
even in rust I find that sealed trait is a very common pattern even with enum type available. But that’s only for access control and cannot do what Java provides with exhaustiveness check on sealed interface. Enum in rust is data, and two enum types cannot be paired to form a description on a same piece of data, unlike traits. But traits are weak and don’t provide exhaustiveness semantics. As a guess, to have the same power, it seems to require a proper sum type with intersection operation?
@Michal_Peterka Жыл бұрын
The sealed interface looks similar to F# discriminated union - but the DU has more general use.
@subrezon7 ай бұрын
10:44 "you have to go back and add classes to the interface", you don't though. If you don't need exhaustive checking - just do what you did before.
@That_0ne_Dev Жыл бұрын
Java 21?! Last I checked it was Java 7
@paulrei00 Жыл бұрын
Last I checked was... I can't even say the exact version - It was J2ME 😂
@vytah Жыл бұрын
They went full Ubuntu and release a version every six months.
Жыл бұрын
at least they should have pressed format on the code before pasting it into the article. whats up with the extra (inconsistent) spaces and newlines?
@nomadshiba Жыл бұрын
5:50 i prefer `is` over `instanceof`
@Tvde1 Жыл бұрын
exactly how we do it in C#
@redpepper7411 ай бұрын
It’s weird that they used “instanceof” when they stressed the “is a” inheritance relationship so much in my Java classes
@LookjaklooK11 ай бұрын
Though C# copied from J va initially, it seems that Java is now copying C# to keep up XD
@alangamer50 Жыл бұрын
Can we all agree that Java is going places? Maybe in another 20 years we'll get top-level statements
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
There already is REPL for Java which supports top-level statements.
@nsshurtz Жыл бұрын
Sealed types are actually quite beneficial. You control exactly who can implement it therefore you can have a library expose an interface that where it is used can't have certain things be implemented potentially incorrectly. The exhsustiveness is also another benefit. But the way that Java does it is really really bad. The declaration of the inheritance should not need to know about every instance. Kotlin has had them for quite some time (if not since the beginning) and they simply must be defined in the same package in the same module, the definition of the interface doesn't need to permit the implementations.
@DisFunctor Жыл бұрын
This was a good video. I hope Java 21 serves as a gateway drug to Scala for more people out there 😉 Scala 3 pretty much does all of this with nicer syntax. Kotlin is pretty good too, but its existence is kind of a weird thing to me, considering it's pretty much a Scala-lite with angle brackets instead of square brackets. Instead of creating a whole new language, they could've just poured the resources into making the improvements they wanted to see in Scala's tooling and compiler, Idk. Java has the most jobs out there, though. So it's nice devs will get some of this stuff finally.
@Mglunafh Жыл бұрын
Modern Java is a gateway drug to Kotlin JetBrains created kotlin because they wanted a better fate for the android developers, Scala did not have such a mission
@zhamed9587 Жыл бұрын
@@MglunafhJava is already better than Kotlin in several features including pattern matching, virtual threads (no need for suspend functions), and string templates. More features in the work as well.
@scitechplusexplorer2484 Жыл бұрын
@@zhamed9587 Yeah, but Google is pushing desperately Java OUT of the Android ecosystem, at least when it comes to App development. All new features and libraries like Jetpack Compose, all exclusive for Kotlin. So, Android with Java is not any more a good option!
@Ewig_Luftenglanz Жыл бұрын
@@Mglunafhthe opposite, with modern Java all the advantages that kotlin used to have are no more. Also with virtual threads and the Executor API Java has far better concurrence implementation than any other language but maybe Go
@Oeuvre-Bramon9 ай бұрын
Scala sucks for 1 reason: Compare scala 2 vs scala 3 Whole new syntax. Iamge what happens if scala 4 comes out
@joshaustintech Жыл бұрын
For states in a Future, I've had to look at it at a low level while mocking asynchronous message handling in a unit test, but it was with Java 11 so it was messy to write!
@monkev1199 Жыл бұрын
Still waiting for project valhalla....
@Wysumay11 ай бұрын
I think the idea behind `permits` is that is necessary to do for the switch pattern to exists and make sort of a monomorphisation, that is exactly what the crates `enum dispatch` does in rust.
@Loading_BG Жыл бұрын
this article is so badly written that it makes the past 6 years of development look like adding a method in the darkest corner of stdlib that no one asked for
@wintermute701 Жыл бұрын
14:55 >How can division overflow? Integer.MIN_VALUE / -1
@jelly-owl Жыл бұрын
This is basically Kotlin, but uglier
@erickmoya1401 Жыл бұрын
And exists only because Kotlin humilliated them. Otherwise these fat companies would have kept using Java 7 forever.
@vinterskugge907 Жыл бұрын
Java is stealing Kotlin's clothes, and then leaving Kotlin to die freezing in the cold. Seriously, looking a decade into the future, will there be any new projects using Kotlin then? Doubt it.
@filipmajetic1174 Жыл бұрын
The 8-space indent is called a "continuation indent" in intellij, and yeah I always make it the same as the regular indent
@karlosdaniel653710 ай бұрын
Do you know why Intellij does that by default?
@stanislavnepochatov8381 Жыл бұрын
I really like Java for sheer stability. Decade old projects still supported and can be build for older machines or JRE. Even Swing apps now adapting to HiDPI. But I dislike Spring. It introduce too much 'magic'.
@dibyojyotibhattacherjee4279 Жыл бұрын
Happy for these kinds of improvements after being a Java dev!
@leetaeryeo5269 Жыл бұрын
If I want to love Java, I’ll use Kotlin. Get the benefit of the JVM and JDK, but Kotlin is so nice in comparison. Both are still second fiddle to C#, though
@shykial_ Жыл бұрын
What's better in C# compared to Kotlin? I would definitely choose Kotlin instead of C# when choosing between those two, interested in your opinion
@leetaeryeo5269 Жыл бұрын
@@shykial_ honestly, they’re both equally viable. I’m just a .NET guy, so I prefer C#.
@Tvde1 Жыл бұрын
>benefit of JVM LOL
@leetaeryeo5269 Жыл бұрын
@@Tvde1I mean, it does have some benefits in that it's runnable pretty much everywhere and there is a massive library ecosystem for it. Would I personally use it? Not really, but I can't deny it its good points
@tobolajan Жыл бұрын
@@Tvde1 What is so funny about it?
@Skiamakhos Жыл бұрын
This feels like Markiplier does software development language critiques.
@myname2462 Жыл бұрын
Im glad that C# already had these things.
@erastvandoren Жыл бұрын
What's the purpose of multiline strings inside of multiline strings?
@masterchief15205 ай бұрын
None as far as I can tell 😂. He just wanted to meme java to fit in with the CHAT.
@lilvulgate Жыл бұрын
Java is not bad. I love it.
@zhamed9587 Жыл бұрын
You don't need to explicitly `permit` a new implementation of an interface if it is in the same file. This is basically tagged unions/ADTs.
@JonnyJKF Жыл бұрын
PHP has multiline strings with interpolaton so you can put variables in your email templates, etc. without having to use sprintf or a separate templating language. PHP > Rust > Java 21 confirmed.
@nnnik3595 Жыл бұрын
But PHP has PHPs typing system.
@benderbg Жыл бұрын
String template is the new Java feature, not multi line that's been there for ages.
@vytah Жыл бұрын
@@benderbg They're in preview, so no one will actually use it except for some experiments.
@benderbg Жыл бұрын
For now yes but its here to stay. Its a big improvement and way overdue @@vytah
@helderneres Жыл бұрын
Java has Apache Velocity. Much better than PHP to templating...
@ger4a1 Жыл бұрын
Surprised there are not that many comments about Scala, as records + new switch is such a tiny portion of what Scala pattern matching can do, would blow peoples mind
@luckyLaserface6 ай бұрын
Scala is such a pretty and powerful language. I hope it gets more adoption.
@Sairysss1 Жыл бұрын
Java > Go
@chriswininger30222 күн бұрын
The two way relationship between a Sealed interface and its implementations is not nearly as weird when you understand some common ways interfaces actually get used. You may as the developer of said library want to be able to add new implementations, but that isn't necessarily something a consumer of the library should do. The sealed lets you expose that interface to them but with semantics that say, this isn't for you to extend. And as discussed it guarantees a finite number of implementations provided by the library author allowing for exhaustive switch.
@prashanth7996 Жыл бұрын
C# has these for years
@sacredgeometry Жыл бұрын
Hey, leave Java alone. They are trying. They have to start somewhere. Ironic that people call C# a Java ripoff considering its probably more the opposite since C# 3 ... what are we on now? 11?
@vytah Жыл бұрын
C# doesn't have cheap threads, they just cancelled the .NET green thread project yesterday.
@sacredgeometry Жыл бұрын
@@vytah They cancelled them for a good reason.
@IvanRandomDude Жыл бұрын
C# bros are like a sect nowadays. Jehovah's witnesses of developer community.
@RustedCroaker Жыл бұрын
@@IvanRandomDude Microsoft fun boys
@floppa9415 Жыл бұрын
Java is now only 10 years behind everyone else. Big wupididioh!
@dasten123 Жыл бұрын
As a JS fanboy I finally enjoyed you making fun of a language
@diamondmohanty29154 ай бұрын
I fee like sealed types are similar to enum types in Swift. They can be really handy when writing conditions for all the cases and get flaged in compiled if some cases are missed.
@om3galul989 Жыл бұрын
Always think about Java from the perspective of dinosaur legacy systems, this is who the language maintainers have in mind.
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
Always keep your prejudices.
@masterchief15205 ай бұрын
Bet you wouldn't be able to explain what you puked in this comment.
@shadeblackwolf15087 ай бұрын
In java, Futures have all the callbacks you'd like, but they now ALSO offer a state examination alongside existing.
@genuineCoder3697 ай бұрын
The more people dislike java the more money I make 👏
@toby99996 ай бұрын
How so?
@genuineCoder3696 ай бұрын
@@toby9999 Well since more people are steering away from learning java (i’m just assuming), and or wanting java developer jobs, the more other java developers like myself will be in demand.
@kraigochieng6395 Жыл бұрын
At 8:19, maybe the sealed keyword might be for bidirectional restriction. An interface can only be used by specific classes. Then as usual, a class that implements an interface must implement everything of that interface. But I dont see a use case💀
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
Use case are types which are known to be a finite set (think state diagram, expression types in a parser etc.) and you must be able to reason about them all.
@anon-fz2bo Жыл бұрын
only thing i hate about java is the way exception handling works. c++ is better on the other hand, in that it doesnt force you to catch exceptions.
@CottidaeSEA Жыл бұрын
Huh? How is that better? Besides, you can just keep throwing exceptions if that's what you truly want. However, I'd say that if you have a problem with exception handling, you have a control flow issue and not a language issue.
@monkev1199 Жыл бұрын
There is a sneaky throw thing I see a lot in Java
@Speykious Жыл бұрын
Forcing you to catch exceptions is a good thing. That's how I was able to refactor the error handling of a native Java app at my job in pretty much one go, because the IDE was telling me exactly where the errors are supposed to happen. I update the function or the function signature accordingly. I never use Java outside of my job though because I hate all its shortcomings. Rust fits all my use cases right now
@anon-fz2bo Жыл бұрын
@@CottidaeSEAknew there would be this kinda dumbass reply smh. do i rly have to explain how its better? ffs guess i do, then again if yr such a baby when it comes to programming that u need a compiler to hold ur hand every freaking step of the way i guess u wouldnt understand what i actually meant.
@anon-fz2bo Жыл бұрын
@@CottidaeSEAtrust me dude, control flow aint an issue for me lol. im 100% a better programmer than you ever will be. peace.
@_Aarius_ Жыл бұрын
9:00 that's kinda cool? Allows you to sort of construct value enums with the interface - you can switch on the known types of the interface, get the class, and pull a value out of it
@mmmhorsesteaks Жыл бұрын
Ah you know, these young whippersnappers like Java will catch up to good old python at one point.
@HrHaakon Жыл бұрын
Java is newer than Python
@mmmhorsesteaks Жыл бұрын
@@HrHaakon yes! '95 vs '91 for python.
@RustedCroaker Жыл бұрын
Hope not in a code execution speed.
@pramodjingade6581 Жыл бұрын
@8:12 question 🙋♂️ is sealed type interfaces similar to Trait bounds in Rust ?
@rob-890 Жыл бұрын
Java is good.
@erickmoya1401 Жыл бұрын
Kotlis is better.
@rob-890 Жыл бұрын
@@erickmoya1401 kolon
@dleonardo3238 Жыл бұрын
@@erickmoya1401 way better haha
@fan87tw Жыл бұрын
😭
@MarcLucksch Жыл бұрын
No. Maybe if I wouldn’t have to work with it every day, I would agree, but till then… Just no, it’s not good.
@tofaa3668 Жыл бұрын
One thing I'd like to note about sealed interfaces is that they are designed for strict api reasons. For example lets say we have a method that takes our Point object which is an interface that represents a point in a 3d space. We want two implementations of it for example a vector (strict 3 variables) and a position (for our player, with head movements). We cannot just allow people to implement their own points ans pass it around the methods that require a point thus sealed is used to prevent other outside implementations
@h4ktbtw Жыл бұрын
They are now just trying to turn Java into Kotlin, but they are not doing a particularly good job at it. Java's syntax still sucks and Kotlin fixes all of that on top of a huge std lib.
@jaysistar2711 Жыл бұрын
5:00 The new switch statement is basically a Rust match expression without destruturing or the capability to have guards.
@falklumo Жыл бұрын
destructuring for switch is planned next. Guards are already in Java 21 (when clause), just omitted in the article discussed here.
@Bourn77 Жыл бұрын
Java is literally just copying C# at this point. Almost all these features are copy paste C# features Btw, if you want to use Java in 2023, just use C# or Kotlin instead. 😂
@marna_li Жыл бұрын
I just wonder why they have to make the syntax so different/foreign? Like the backslash at the start of the interpolation syntax...
@emaayan Жыл бұрын
And the problem with that is? This isn't art, these are tools, being original (non standard) actually hurts, so if one sees pattern in one language it helps if they show up in another language
@adambickford8720 Жыл бұрын
How them green threads treating you?
@Bourn77 Жыл бұрын
@@emaayan I agree, they should've also just copied async-await from C#, this future thingy is not readable at all imho.
@alessioantinoro5713 Жыл бұрын
@@Bourn77The future things is just to ease things up for libraries, usually you will use the functional style CompletableFuture You run an async task and then when it completes you can choose if lunch another task in async with the result of the last task or just wait for it to be complete, it also handles exceptions in the same way. Example: CompletableFuture.supplyAsync(() -> { // Executes task.. return elaboratedData; }.thenAccept(data -> { // Handles the data from the task }.expecially(e -> { // Handles problems } // The main thread keeps will not wait and the task and will execute in parallel. If you want the thread to wait, just add .join(); at the end of the CompletableFuture
@gonzalooviedo543511 ай бұрын
You don't understand Virtual Threads, it is not blocking thead, the thread release for another task in the JVM, so a lot of threads are running executing tasks.