Serialization opt-in syntax (again)
Brian Goetz
brian.goetz at oracle.com
Fri Sep 28 20:48:04 PDT 2012
Bob is definitely right here that the semantics of this are closer to what we want than any of the others. While the proximate problem is "how do I make a serializable lambda", the way you make a class serializable in Java is (in part) to extend Serializable. So something that addresses the "how to I extend Serializable" question is much more in the spirit of how serialization works (for better or worse) than a special magic serialization syntax.
On Sep 28, 2012, at 4:14 PM, Bob Lee wrote:
> I like the semantics a lot! Maybe moving the "implements" decl to the right of the -> would address Kevin's concerns? Then it would read "lambda (->) implements ..."
>
> Bob
>
> On Fri, Sep 28, 2012 at 1:47 PM, Brian Goetz <brian.goetz at oracle.com> wrote:
> I put all the candidate syntaxes so far in the JIRA issue for this, but a new one came to light this week that we kind of like.
>
> The problem is: let's say you have a SAM that is not serializable, but you want the instance to be, such as in:
>
> Runnable r = () -> { };
>
> The problem is that we really want to specify multiple interfaces for the lambda, and as long as their intersection has only one abstract method, that should be OK.
>
> So, how about using the space between the closing paren and the arrow:
>
> Runnable r = () implements Serializable -> { ... }
>
> As a bonus, if we wanted to be explicit about all the implemented interfaces, this easily extends to:
>
> Object p = (String s) implements Predicate<String>, Serializable -> { ... }
>
>
> This also extends nicely to inner class creation expressions. Right now there is a limit of one named supertype. But this could be extended:
>
> Predicate<String> p = new Predicate<String>() implements Serializable { ... }
>
> In this case, there is no single-method restriction; you could implement Iterator and Runnable if you wanted:
>
> new Iterator<T>() implements Runnable { ... }
>
> Note that none of this is serialization-specific; it is simply a way of being explicit about multiple supertypes in contexts there this was not previously allowed.
>
>
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