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<blockquote type="cite" cite="mid:CAE+3fjY-aMUZk3DnfdDZPd_oe2fygV1bEKN=JgvxfBeDrBFUZw@mail.gmail.com">
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<div>It's interesting that when language designers make the code
easier to write, somebody may complain that it's too easy :-)</div>
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<br>
I too had that "you can't win" feeling :)<br>
<br>
I would recast the question here as "Can Java developers handle
carrier classes". Records are restricted enough to keep developers
_mostly_ out of trouble, but the desire to believe that this is a
syntactic and not semantic feature is a strong one, and given that
many developers education about how the language works is limited to
"what does IntelliJ suggest to me", may not even _realize_ they are
giving into the dark side. <br>
<br>
I think it is worth working through the example here for "how would
we recommend handling the case of a "active" row like this. <br>
<br>
<blockquote type="cite" cite="mid:CAE+3fjY-aMUZk3DnfdDZPd_oe2fygV1bEKN=JgvxfBeDrBFUZw@mail.gmail.com">
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<div>I think it's a perfect place for static analysis tooling.
One may invent an annotation like `@NonUpdatable` </div>
<div>with the `RECORD_COMPONENT` target and use it on such
fields, then create an annotation processor </div>
<div>(ErrorProne plugin, IntelliJ IDEA inspection, CodeQL rule,
etc.), that will check the violations and fail the build if
there are any.</div>
<div>Adding such a special case to the language specification
would be an overcomplication.</div>
<div><br>
</div>
<div>With best regards,<br>
Tagir Valeev.</div>
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<div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Sun, Jan 25, 2026 at
11:48 PM Brian Goetz <<a href="mailto:brian.goetz@oracle.com" moz-do-not-send="true" class="moz-txt-link-freetext">brian.goetz@oracle.com</a>>
wrote:<br>
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<div> <font size="4" face="monospace">The important mental
model here is that a reconstruction (`with`) expression is
"just" a syntactic optimization for:<br>
<br>
- destructure with the canonical deconstruction pattern<br>
- mutate the components <br>
- reconstruct with the primary constructor<br>
<br>
So the root problem here is not the reconstruction
expression; if you can bork up your application state with
a reconstruction expression, you can bork it up without
one. <br>
<br>
</font><font size="4" face="monospace">Primary constructors
can enforce invariants _on_ or _between_ components, such
as:<br>
<br>
record Rational(int num, int denom) { <br>
Rational { if (denom == 0) throw ... }<br>
}<br>
<br>
or<br>
<br>
record Range(int lo, int hi) { <br>
Range { if (lo > hi) throw... }<br>
}<br>
<br>
What they can't do is express invariants between the
record / carrier state and "the rest of the system",
because they are supposed to be simple data carriers, not
serialized references to some external system. </font><font size="4" face="monospace">A class that models a database
row in this way is complecting entity state with an
external entity id. By modeling in this way, you have
explicitly declared that <br>
<br>
rec with { dbId++ }<br>
<br>
*is explicitly OK* in your system; that the components of
the record can be freely combined in any way (modulo
enforced cross-component invariants). And there are
systems in which this is fine! But you're imagining
(correctly) that this modeling technique will be used in
systems in which this is not fine. <br>
</font><font size="4" face="monospace"><br>
The main challenge here is that developers will be so
attracted to the syntactic concision that they will
willfully ignore the semantic inconsistencies they are
creating. <br>
<br>
<br>
</font><br>
<br>
<div>On 1/25/2026 1:37 PM, Andy Gegg wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"> <font face="Times New Roman">Hello,<br>
I apologise for coming late to the party here - Records
have been of limited use to me but Mr Goetz's email on
carrier classes is something that would be very useful
so I've been thinking about the consequences.<br>
<br>
Since carrier classes and records are for data, in a
database application somewhere or other you're going to
get database ids in records:<br>
record MyRec(int dbId, String name,...)<br>
<br>
While everything is immutable this is fine but JEP 468
opens up the possibility of mutation:<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Times New Roman">MyRec rec</font><font face="Times New Roman"> = readDatabase(...);<br>
rec = rec with {name="...";};<br>
writeDatabase(rec);<br>
<br>
which is absolutely fine and what an application wants
to do. But:<br>
</font><font face="Times New Roman">MyRec </font><font face="Times New Roman">rec = readDatabase(...);<br>
rec = rec with {dbId++;};<br>
writeDatabase(rec);<br>
<br>
is disastrous. There's no way the canonical constructor
invoked from 'with' can detect stupidity nor can
whatever the database access layer does.<br>
<br>
In the old days, the lack of a 'setter' would usually
prevent stupid code - the above could be achieved,
obviously, but the code is devious enough to make people
stop and think (one hopes).<br>
<br>
Here there is nothing to say "do not update this!!!"
except code comments, JavaDoc and naming conventions.<br>
<br>
It's not always obvious which fields may or may not be
changed in the application.<br>
<br>
record </font><font face="Times New Roman">MyRec(int
dbId, int fatherId,...)<br>
probably doesn't want<br>
rec = rec with { fatherId = ... }<br>
<br>
but a HR application will need to be able to do:<br>
<br>
record </font><font face="Times New Roman">MyRec(int
dbId, int departmentId, ...);<br>
...<br>
rec = rec with { </font><font face="Times New Roman">departmentId
= newDept; };<br>
<br>
Clearly, people can always write stupid code (guilty...)
and the current state of play obviously allows the
possibility (rec = new MyRec(rec.dbId++, ...);) which is
enough to stop people using records here but carrier
classes will be very tempting and that brings derived
creation back to the fore.<br>
<br>
It's not just database ids which might need restricting
from update, e.g. timestamps (which are better done in
the database layer) and no doubt different applications
will have their own business case restrictions.<br>
<br>
Thank you for your time,<br>
Andy Gegg<br>
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