JEP 420: Pattern Matching for switch (Second Preview)
Owner | Gavin Bierman |
Type | Feature |
Scope | SE |
Status | Closed / Delivered |
Release | 18 |
Component | specification / language |
Discussion | amber dash dev at openjdk dot java dot net |
Relates to | JEP 406: Pattern Matching for switch (Preview) |
JEP 427: Pattern Matching for switch (Third Preview) | |
Reviewed by | Brian Goetz, Maurizio Cimadamore |
Created | 2021/09/03 13:00 |
Updated | 2023/05/12 15:34 |
Issue | 8273326 |
Summary
Enhance the Java programming language with pattern matching for switch
expressions and statements, along with extensions to the language of patterns.
Extending pattern matching to switch
allows an expression to be tested against
a number of patterns, each with a specific action, so that complex data-oriented
queries can be expressed concisely and safely. This is a preview language feature in JDK 18.
History
Pattern Matching for switch
was proposed by
JEP 406 and delivered in
JDK 17 as a
preview feature. This JEP proposes
a second preview of the feature in
JDK 18 with minor refinements based
upon experience and feedback.
The enhancements since the first preview are:
-
Dominance checking now forces a constant case label to appear before a guarded pattern of the same type, for readability (see 1b, below); and
-
Exhaustiveness checking of switch blocks is now more precise with sealed hierarchies where the permitted direct subclass only extends an instantiation of the (generic)
sealed
superclass (see 2, below).
Goals
-
Expand the expressiveness and applicability of
switch
expressions and statements by allowing patterns to appear incase
labels. -
Allow the historical null-hostility of
switch
to be relaxed when desired. -
Introduce two new kinds of patterns: guarded patterns, to allow pattern matching logic to be refined with arbitrary boolean expressions, and parenthesized patterns, to resolve some parsing ambiguities.
-
Ensure that all existing
switch
expressions and statements continue to compile with no changes and execute with identical semantics. -
Do not introduce a new
switch
-like expression or statement with pattern-matching semantics that is separate from the traditionalswitch
construct. -
Do not make the
switch
expression or statement behave differently when case labels are patterns versus when case labels are traditional constants.
Motivation
In Java 16, JEP 394 extended the instanceof
operator to take a type
pattern and perform pattern matching. This modest extension allows the
familiar instanceof-and-cast idiom to be simplified:
// Old code
if (o instanceof String) {
String s = (String)o;
... use s ...
}
// New code
if (o instanceof String s) {
... use s ...
}
We often want to compare a variable such as o
against multiple
alternatives. Java supports multi-way comparisons with switch
statements and,
since Java 14, switch
expressions (JEP 361), but unfortunately
switch
is very limited. You can only switch on values of a few types — numeric
types, enum types, and String
— and you can only test for exact equality
against constants. We might like to use patterns to test the same variable
against a number of possibilities, taking a specific action on each, but since
the existing switch
does not support that, we end up with a chain of
if...else
tests such as:
static String formatter(Object o) {
String formatted = "unknown";
if (o instanceof Integer i) {
formatted = String.format("int %d", i);
} else if (o instanceof Long l) {
formatted = String.format("long %d", l);
} else if (o instanceof Double d) {
formatted = String.format("double %f", d);
} else if (o instanceof String s) {
formatted = String.format("String %s", s);
}
return formatted;
}
This code benefits from using pattern instanceof
expressions, but it is far
from perfect. First and foremost, this approach allows coding errors to remain
hidden because we have used an overly general control construct. The intent is
to assign something to formatted
in each arm of the if...else
chain, but
there is nothing that enables the compiler to identify and verify this
invariant. If some block — perhaps one that is executed rarely — does not assign
to formatted
, we have a bug. (Declaring formatted
as a blank local would at
least enlist the compiler’s definite-assignment analysis in this effort, but
such declarations are not always written.) In addition, the above code is not
optimizable; absent compiler heroics it will have O(n) time complexity,
even though the underlying problem is often O(1).
But switch
is a perfect match for pattern matching! If we extend switch
statements and expressions to work on any type, and allow case
labels with
patterns rather than just constants, then we could rewrite the above code more
clearly and reliably:
static String formatterPatternSwitch(Object o) {
return switch (o) {
case Integer i -> String.format("int %d", i);
case Long l -> String.format("long %d", l);
case Double d -> String.format("double %f", d);
case String s -> String.format("String %s", s);
default -> o.toString();
};
}
The semantics of this switch
are clear: A case
label with a pattern matches
the value of the selector expression o
if the value matches the pattern. (We
have shown a switch
expression for brevity but could instead have shown a
switch
statement; the switch block, including the case
labels, would be
unchanged.)
The intent of this code is clearer because we are using the right control
construct: We are saying, "the parameter o
matches at most one of the
following conditions, figure it out and evaluate the corresponding arm." As a
bonus, it is optimizable; in this case we are more likely to be able to perform
the dispatch in O(1) time.
Pattern matching and null
Traditionally, switch
statements and expressions throw NullPointerException
if the selector expression evaluates to null
, so testing for null
must be
done outside of the switch
:
static void testFooBar(String s) {
if (s == null) {
System.out.println("oops!");
return;
}
switch (s) {
case "Foo", "Bar" -> System.out.println("Great");
default -> System.out.println("Ok");
}
}
This was reasonable when switch
supported only a few reference types.
However, if switch
allows a selector expression of any type, and case
labels
can have type patterns, then the standalone null
test feels like an arbitrary
distinction, and invites needless boilerplate and opportunity for error. It
would be better to integrate the null
test into the switch
:
static void testFooBar(String s) {
switch (s) {
case null -> System.out.println("Oops");
case "Foo", "Bar" -> System.out.println("Great");
default -> System.out.println("Ok");
}
}
The behavior of the switch
when the value of the selector expression is null
is always determined by its case
labels. With a case null
(or a total type
pattern; see 4a, below) the switch
executes the code associated with that label; without a case null
, the
switch
throws NullPointerException
, just as before. (To maintain backward
compatibility with the current semantics of switch
, the default
label does
not match a null
selector.)
We may wish to handle null
in the same way as another case
label. For
example, in the following code, case null, String s
would match both the
null
value and all String
values:
static void testStringOrNull(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case null, String s -> System.out.println("String: " + s);
}
}
Refining patterns in switch
Experimentation with patterns in switch
suggests it is common to want to
refine patterns. Consider the following code that switches over a Shape
value:
class Shape {}
class Rectangle extends Shape {}
class Triangle extends Shape { int calculateArea() { ... } }
static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
switch (s) {
case null:
break;
case Triangle t:
if (t.calculateArea() > 100) {
System.out.println("Large triangle");
break;
}
default:
System.out.println("A shape, possibly a small triangle");
}
}
The intent of this code is to have a special case for large triangles (with area
over 100), and a default case for everything else (including small triangles).
However, we cannot express this directly with a single pattern. We first have to
write a case
label that matches all triangles, and then place the test of the
area of the triangle rather uncomfortably within the corresponding statement
group. Then we have to use fall-through to get the correct behavior when the
triangle has an area less than 100. (Note the careful placement of break;
inside the if
block.)
The problem here is that using a single pattern to discriminate among cases does
not scale beyond a single condition. We need some way to express a refinement
to a pattern. One approach might be to allow case
labels to be refined; such a
refinement is called a guard in other programming languages. For example, we
could introduce a new keyword where
to appear at the end of a case
label and
be followed by a boolean expression, e.g., case Triangle t where t.calculateArea() > 100
.
However, there is another approach: Rather than extend the
functionality of case
labels, we can extend the language of patterns
themselves. We can add a new kind of pattern called a guarded pattern,
written p && b
, that allows a pattern p
to be refined by an arbitrary
boolean expression b
.
With this approach, we can revisit the testTriangle
code to express the
special case for large triangles directly. This eliminates the use of
fall-through in the switch
statement, which in turn means we can enjoy concise
arrow-style (->
) rules:
static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
switch (s) {
case Triangle t && (t.calculateArea() > 100) ->
System.out.println("Large triangle");
default ->
System.out.println("A shape, possibly a small triangle");
}
}
The value of s
matches the pattern Triangle t && (t.calculateArea() > 100)
if, first, it matches the type pattern Triangle t
and, if so, the expression
t.calculateArea() > 100
evaluates to true
.
Using switch
makes it easy to understand and change case labels when
application requirements change. For example, we might want to split triangles
out of the default path; we can do that by using both a refined pattern and a
non-refined pattern:
static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
switch (s) {
case Triangle t && (t.calculateArea() > 100) ->
System.out.println("Large triangle");
case Triangle t ->
System.out.println("Small triangle");
default ->
System.out.println("Non-triangle");
}
}
Description
We enhance switch
statements and expressions in two ways:
-
Extend
case
labels to include patterns in addition to constants, and -
Introduce two new kinds of patterns: guarded patterns and parenthesized patterns.
Patterns in switch labels
The heart of the proposal is to introduce a new case p
switch label, where p
is a pattern. The essence of a switch
is unchanged: The value of the
selector expression is compared to the switch labels, one of the labels is
selected, and the code associated with that label is executed. The difference is
now that for case
labels with patterns, that selection is determined by
pattern matching rather than by an equality test. For example, in the following
code, the value of o
matches the pattern Long l
, and the code associated
with case Long l
will be executed:
Object o = 123L;
String formatted = switch (o) {
case Integer i -> String.format("int %d", i);
case Long l -> String.format("long %d", l);
case Double d -> String.format("double %f", d);
case String s -> String.format("String %s", s);
default -> o.toString();
};
There are four major design issues when case
labels can have patterns:
- Enhanced type checking
- Exhaustiveness of
switch
expressions and statements - Scope of pattern variable declarations
- Dealing with
null
1. Enhanced type checking
1a. Selector expression typing
Supporting patterns in switch
means that we can relax the current
restrictions on the type of the selector expression. Currently the type of the
selector expression of a normal switch
must be either an integral primitive
type (char
, byte
, short
, or int
), the corresponding boxed form
(Character
, Byte
, Short
, or Integer
), String
, or an enum type. We
extend this and require that the type of the selector expression be either an
integral primitive type or any reference type.
For example, in the following pattern switch
the selector expression o
is
matched with type patterns involving a class type, an enum type, a record type,
and an array type (along with a null
case
label and a default
):
record Point(int i, int j) {}
enum Color { RED, GREEN, BLUE; }
static void typeTester(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case null -> System.out.println("null");
case String s -> System.out.println("String");
case Color c -> System.out.println("Color with " + c.values().length + " values");
case Point p -> System.out.println("Record class: " + p.toString());
case int[] ia -> System.out.println("Array of ints of length" + ia.length);
default -> System.out.println("Something else");
}
}
Every case
label in the switch block must be compatible with the selector
expression. For a case
label with a pattern, known as a pattern label, we
use the existing notion of compatibility of an expression with a pattern (JLS
§14.30.1).
1b. Dominance of pattern labels
It is possible for the selector expression to match multiple labels in a switch block. Consider this problematic example:
static void error(Object o) {
switch(o) {
case CharSequence cs ->
System.out.println("A sequence of length " + cs.length());
case String s -> // Error - pattern is dominated by previous pattern
System.out.println("A string: " + s);
default -> {
break;
}
}
}
The first pattern label case CharSequence cs
dominates the second pattern
label case String s
because every value that matches the pattern String s
also matches the pattern CharSequence cs
, but not vice versa. This is because
the type of the second pattern, String
, is a subtype of the type of the first
pattern, CharSequence
.
A pattern label of the form case p
where p
is a total pattern for the type of
the selector expression dominates a label case null
. This is because a total
pattern matches all values, including null
.
A pattern label of the form case p
dominates a pattern label of the form case p && e
, i.e., where the pattern is a guarded version of the original pattern.
For example, the pattern label case String s
dominates the pattern label case String s && s.length() > 0
, since every value that matches the guarded pattern
String s && s.length() > 0
also matches the pattern String s
.
A pattern label can dominate a constant label. For example, the pattern label
case Integer i
dominates the constant label case 42
, and the pattern label
case E e
dominates the constant label case A
when A
is an enum constant
of enum class type E
. A guarded pattern label dominates a constant label if
its contained label does; we do not check the guarding expression, since this is
undecidable in general. Thus a guarded pattern label case String s && s.length()>1
dominates the constant label case "hello"
, as expected; but also
case Integer i && i <> 0
dominates the label case 0
. This leads to a simple
and readable ordering of case labels, where the constant labels should appear
before the guarded pattern labels, and those should appear before the
non-guarded type pattern labels:
switch(o) {
case -1, 1 -> ... // Special cases
case Integer i && i > 0 -> ... // Positive integer cases
case Integer i -> ... // All the remaining integers
default ->
}
The compiler checks all labels. It is a compile-time error if a label in a switch block is dominated by an earlier label in that switch block. This dominance requirement ensures that if a switch block contains only type pattern case labels, they will appear in subtype order.
(The notion of dominance is analogous to conditions on the catch
clauses of a
try
statement, where it is an error if a catch
clause that catches an
exception class E
is preceded by a catch
clause that can catch E
or a
superclass of E
(JLS §11.2.3). Logically, the preceding
catch
clause dominates the subsequent catch
clause.)
It is also a compile-time error if a switch block has more than one match-all
switch label. The two match-all labels are default
and total type patterns
(see 4a, below).
2. Exhaustiveness of switch
expressions and statements
A switch
expression requires that all possible values of the selector
expression are handled in the switch block; in other words, it is exhaustive.
This maintains the property that successful evaluation of a switch
expression
will always yield a value. For normal switch
expressions, this is enforced by
a fairly straightforward set of extra conditions on the switch block. For
pattern switch
expressions, we achieve this by defining a notion of type
coverage of switch labels in a switch block. The type coverage of all the
switch labels in the switch block is then combined to determine if the switch
block exhausts all the possibilities of the selector expression.
Consider this (erroneous) pattern switch
expression:
static int coverage(Object o) {
return switch (o) { // Error - not exhaustive
case String s -> s.length();
};
}
The switch block has only one case
label, case String s
. This matches any
value of the selector expression whose type is a subtype of String
. We
therefore say that the type coverage of this switch label is every subtype of
String
. This pattern switch
expression is not exhaustive because the type
coverage of its switch block (all subtypes of String
) does not include the
type of the selector expression (Object
).
Consider this (still erroneous) example:
static int coverage(Object o) {
return switch (o) { // Error - not exhaustive
case String s -> s.length();
case Integer i -> i;
};
}
The type coverage of this switch block is the union of the coverage of its two
switch labels. In other words, the type coverage is the set of all subtypes of
String
and the set of all subtypes of Integer
. But, again, the type coverage
still does not include the type of the selector expression, so this pattern
switch
expression is also not exhaustive and causes a compile-time error.
The type coverage of a default
label is all types, so this example is (at
last!) legal:
static int coverage(Object o) {
return switch (o) {
case String s -> s.length();
case Integer i -> i;
default -> 0;
};
}
If the type of the selector expression is a sealed class (JEP 409),
then the type coverage check can take into account the permits
clause of the
sealed class to determine whether a switch block is exhaustive. This can
sometimes remove the need for a default
clause. Consider the following example
of a sealed
interface S
with three permitted subclasses A
, B
, and C
:
sealed interface S permits A, B, C {}
final class A implements S {}
final class B implements S {}
record C(int i) implements S {} // Implicitly final
static int testSealedExhaustive(S s) {
return switch (s) {
case A a -> 1;
case B b -> 2;
case C c -> 3;
};
}
The compiler can determine that the type coverage of the switch block is the
types A
, B
, and C
. Since the type of the selector expression, S
, is a
sealed interface whose permitted subclasses are exactly A
, B
, and C
, this
switch block is exhaustive. As a result, no default
label is needed.
Some extra care is needed when a permitted direct subclass only implements an
instantiation of a (generic) sealed
superclass. For example:
sealed interface I<T> permits A, B {}
final class A<X> implements I<String> {}
final class B<Y> implements I<Y> {}
static int testGenericSealedExhaustive(I<Integer> i) {
return switch (i) {
// Exhaustive as no A case possible!
case B<Integer> bi -> 42;
}
}
The only permitted subclasses of I
are A
and B
, but the compiler can
detect that the switch block need only cover the class B
to be exhaustive
since the selector expression is of type I<Integer>
.
To defend against incompatible separate compilation, the compiler automatically
adds a default
label whose code throws an IncompatibleClassChangeError
. This
label will only be reached if the sealed
interface is changed and the switch
code is not recompiled. In effect, the compiler hardens your code for you.
(The requirement for a pattern switch
expression to be exhaustive is
analogous to the treatment of a switch
expression whose selector
expression is an enum class, where a default
clause is not required
if there is a clause for every constant of the enum class.)
The usefulness of having the compiler verify that switch
expressions are
exhaustive is extremely useful. Rather than keep this check solely for switch
expressions, we extend this to switch
statements also. To ensure backward
compatibility, all existing switch
statements will compile unchanged.
But if a switch
statement uses any of the new features detailed in this JEP,
then the compiler will check that it is exhaustive.
More precisely, exhaustiveness is required of any switch
statement that uses pattern
or null
labels or whose selector expression is not one of the legacy types
(char
, byte
, short
, int
, Character
, Byte
, Short
, Integer
,
String
, or an enum type).
This means that now both switch
expressions and switch
statements get the
benefits of stricter type checking. For example:
sealed interface S permits A, B, C {}
final class A implements S {}
final class B implements S {}
record C(int i) implements S {} // Implicitly final
static void switchStatementExhaustive(S s) {
switch (s) { // Error - not exhaustive; missing clause for permitted class B!
case A a :
System.out.println("A");
break;
case C c :
System.out.println("C");
break;
};
}
Making most switch
statements exhaustive is simply a matter of adding a simple
default
clause at the end of the switch block. This leads to clearer and easier
to verify code. For example, the following switch
statement is not exhaustive
and is erroneous:
Object o = ...
switch (o) { // Error - not exhaustive!
case String s:
System.out.println(s);
break;
case Integer i:
System.out.println("Integer");
break;
}
It can be made exhaustive trivially:
Object o = ...
switch (o) {
case String s:
System.out.println(s);
break;
case Integer i:
System.out.println("Integer");
break;
default: // Now exhaustive!
break;
}
(Future compilers of the Java language may emit warnings for legacy switch
statements that are not exhaustive.)
3. Scope of pattern variable declarations
Pattern variables (JEP 394) are local variables that are declared by
patterns. Pattern variable declarations are unusual in that their scope is
flow-sensitive. As a recap consider the following example, where the type
pattern String s
declares the pattern variable s
:
static void test(Object o) {
if ((o instanceof String s) && s.length() > 3) {
System.out.println(s);
} else {
System.out.println("Not a string");
}
}
The declaration of s
is in scope in the right-hand operand of the &&
expression, as well as in the "then" block. However, it is not in scope in the
"else" block; in order for control to transfer to the "else" block the pattern
match must fail, in which case the pattern variable will not have been
initialized.
We extend this flow-sensitive notion of scope for pattern variable declarations
to encompass pattern declarations occurring in case
labels with two new rules:
-
The scope of a pattern variable declaration which occurs in a
case
label of aswitch
rule includes the expression, block, orthrow
statement that appears to the right of the arrow. -
The scope of a pattern variable declaration which occurs in a
case
label of aswitch
labeled statement group includes the block statements of the statement group. It should not be possible to fall through acase
label that declares a pattern variable.
This example shows the first rule in action:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case Character c -> {
if (c.charValue() == 7) {
System.out.println("Ding!");
}
System.out.println("Character");
}
case Integer i ->
throw new IllegalStateException("Invalid Integer argument of value " + i.intValue());
default -> {
break;
}
}
}
The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable c
is the block to the
right of the first arrow.
The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable i
is the throw
statement to the right of the second arrow.
The second rule is more complicated. Let us first consider an example where
there is only one case
label for a switch
labeled statement group:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case Character c:
if (c.charValue() == 7) {
System.out.print("Ding ");
}
if (c.charValue() == 9) {
System.out.print("Tab ");
}
System.out.println("character");
default:
System.out.println();
}
}
The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable c
includes all the
statements of the statement group, namely the two if
statements and
the println
statement. The scope does not include the statements of the
default
statement group, even though the execution of the first statement
group can fall through the default
switch label and execute these statements.
The possibility of falling through a case
label that declares a pattern
variable must be excluded as a compile-time error. Consider this erroneous
example:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case Character c:
if (c.charValue() == 7) {
System.out.print("Ding ");
}
if (c.charValue() == 9) {
System.out.print("Tab ");
}
System.out.println("character");
case Integer i: // Compile-time error
System.out.println("An integer " + i);
default:
break;
}
}
If this were allowed and the value of the selector expression o
was a
Character
, then execution of the switch block could fall through the second
statement group (after case Integer i:
) where the pattern variable i
would
not have been initialized. Allowing execution to fall through a case
label that
declares a pattern variable is therefore a compile-time error.
This is why case Character c: case Integer i: ...
is not permitted. Similar
reasoning applies to the prohibition of multiple patterns in a case
label:
Neither case Character c, Integer i: ...
nor case Character c, Integer i -> ...
is allowed. If such case
labels were allowed then both c
and i
would
be in scope after the colon or arrow, yet only one of them would have been
initialized depending on whether the value of o
was a Character
or an
Integer
.
On the other hand, falling through a label that does not declare a pattern variable is safe, as this example shows:
void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case String s:
System.out.println("A string");
default:
System.out.println("Done");
}
}
4. Dealing with null
4a. Matching null
Traditionally, a switch
throws NullPointerException
if the selector expression
evaluates to null
. This is well-understood behavior and we do not propose
to change it for any existing switch
code.
However, given that there is a reasonable and non-exception-bearing semantics
for pattern matching and null
values, there is an opportunity to make pattern
switch
more null
-friendly while remaining compatible with existing switch
semantics.
First, we introduce a new null
label for a case
, which matches when the
value of the selector expression is null
.
Second, we observe that if a pattern that is total for the type of the
selector expression appears a pattern case
label, then that label will also
match when the value of the selector expression is null
. (A type pattern p of
type U is total for a type T, if T is a subtype of U. For example,
the type pattern Object o
is total for the type String
.)
We lift the blanket rule that a switch
immediately throws
NullPointerException
if the value of the selector expression is null
.
Instead, we inspect the case
labels to determine the behavior of a switch
:
-
If the selector expression evaluates to
null
then anynull
case label or a total pattern case label is said to match. If there is no such label associated with the switch block then theswitch
throwsNullPointerException
, as before. -
If the selector expression evaluates to a non-
null
value then we select a matchingcase
label, as normal. If nocase
label matches then any match-all label is considered to match.
For example, given the declaration below, evaluating test(null)
will print
null!
rather than throw NullPointerException
:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case null -> System.out.println("null!");
case String s -> System.out.println("String");
default -> System.out.println("Something else");
}
}
This new behavior around null
is as if the compiler automatically
enriches the switch block with a case null
whose body throws
NullPointerException
. In other words, this code:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case String s -> System.out.println("String: " + s);
case Integer i -> System.out.println("Integer");
default -> System.out.println("default");
}
}
is equivalent to:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case null -> throw new NullPointerException();
case String s -> System.out.println("String: "+s);
case Integer i -> System.out.println("Integer");
default -> System.out.println("default");
}
}
In both examples, evaluating test(null)
will cause NullPointerException
to
be thrown.
We preserve the intuition from the existing switch
construct that performing a
switch over null
is an exceptional thing to do. The difference in a pattern
switch
is that you have a mechanism to directly handle this case inside the
switch
rather than outside. If you choose not to have a null-matching case
label in a switch block then switching over a null
value will throw
NullPointerException
, as before.
4b. New label forms arising from null
labels
Switch blocks in Java 16 support two styles: one based on labeled groups of
statements (the :
form) where fall-through is possible, and one based on
single-consequent form (the ->
form) where fall-through is not possible. In
the former style, multiple labels are typically written case l1: case l2:
whereas in the latter style, multiple labels are written case l1, l2 ->
.
Supporting null
labels means that a number of special cases can be expressed
in the :
form. For example:
Object o = ...
switch(o) {
case null: case String s:
System.out.println("String, including null");
break;
...
}
Developers reasonably expect the :
and ->
forms to be equally expressive,
and that if case A: case B:
is supported in the former style, then case A, B ->
should be supported in the latter style. Consequently, the previous example
suggests that we should support a case null, String s ->
label, as follows:
Object o = ...
switch(o) {
case null, String s -> System.out.println("String, including null");
...
}
The value of o
matches this label when either it is the null reference, or
it is a String
. In both cases, the pattern variable s
is initialized with
the value of o
.
(The reverse form, case String s, null
is also allowed, and behaves
identically.)
It is also meaningful, and not uncommon, to combine a null
case with a
default
label, i.e.,
Object o = ...
switch(o) {
...
case null: default:
System.out.println("The rest (including null)");
}
Again, this should be supported in the ->
form. To do so we introduce a new
default
case label:
Object o = ...
switch(o) {
...
case null, default ->
System.out.println("The rest (including null)");
}
The value of o
matches this label if either it is the null reference value,
or no other labels match.
Guarded and parenthesized patterns
After a successful pattern match we often further test the result of the match. This can lead to cumbersome code, such as:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case String s:
if (s.length() == 1) { ... }
else { ... }
break;
...
}
}
The desired test — that o
is a String
of length 1 — is unfortunately split
between the case
label and the ensuing if
statement. We could improve
readability if a pattern switch
supported the combination of a pattern and a
boolean expression in a case
label.
Rather than add another special case
label, we enhance the pattern language by
adding guarded patterns, written p && e
. This allows the above code to be
rewritten so that all the conditional logic is lifted into the case
label:
static void test(Object o) {
switch (o) {
case String s && (s.length() == 1) -> ...
case String s -> ...
...
}
}
The first case matches if o
is both a String
and of length 1. The second
case matches if o
is a String
of some other length.
Sometimes we need to parenthesize patterns to avoid parsing ambiguities. We
therefore extend the language of patterns to support parenthesized patterns
written (p)
, where p
is a pattern.
More precisely, we change the grammar of patterns. Assuming that the record patterns and array patterns of JEP 405 are added, the grammar for patterns will become:
Pattern:
PrimaryPattern
GuardedPattern
GuardedPattern:
PrimaryPattern && ConditionalAndExpression
PrimaryPattern:
TypePattern
RecordPattern
ArrayPattern
( Pattern )
A guarded pattern is of the form p && e
, where p
is a pattern and e
is a
boolean expression. In a guarded pattern any local variable, formal parameter,
or exceptional parameter that is used but not declared in the subexpression must
either be final
or effectively final.
A guarded pattern p && e
introduces the union of the pattern variables
introduced by pattern p
and expression e
. The scope of any pattern variable
declaration in p
includes the expression e
. This allows for patterns such as
String s && (s.length() > 1)
, which matches a value that can be cast to a
String
such that the string has a length greater than one.
A value matches a guarded pattern p && e
if, first, it matches the pattern p
and, second, the expression e
evaluates to true
. If the value does not match
p
then no attempt is made to evaluate the expression e
.
A parenthesized pattern is of the form (p)
, where p
is a pattern. A
parenthesized pattern (p)
introduces the pattern variables that are introduced
by the subpattern p
. A value matches a parenthesized pattern (p)
if it
matches the pattern p
.
We also change the grammar for instanceof
expressions to:
InstanceofExpression:
RelationalExpression instanceof ReferenceType
RelationalExpression instanceof PrimaryPattern
This change, and the non-terminal ConditionalAndExpression
in the grammar rule
for a guarded pattern, ensure that, for example, the expression e instanceof String s && s.length() > 1
continues to unambiguously parse as the expression
(e instanceof String s) && (s.length() > 1)
. If the trailing &&
is intended
to be part of a guarded pattern then the entire pattern should be parenthesized,
e.g., e instanceof (String s && s.length() > 1)
.
The use of the non-terminal ConditionalAndExpression
in the grammar rule for
guarded patterns also removes another potential ambiguity concerning a case
label with a guarded pattern. For example:
boolean b = true;
switch (o) {
case String s && b -> s -> s;
}
If the guard expression of a guarded pattern were allowed to be an arbitrary
expression then there would be an ambiguity as to whether the first occurrence
of ->
is part of a lambda expression or part of the switch rule, whose body
is a lambda expression. Since a lambda expression can never be a valid boolean
expression, it is safe to restrict the grammar of the guard expression.
Future work
-
At the moment, a pattern
switch
does not support the primitive typesboolean
,float
, anddouble
. Their utility seems minimal, but support for these could be added. -
We expect that, in the future, general classes will be able to declare deconstruction patterns to specify how they can be matched against. Such deconstruction patterns can be used with a pattern
switch
to yield very succinct code. For example, if we have a hierarchy ofExpr
with subtypes forIntExpr
(containing a singleint
),AddExpr
andMulExpr
(containing twoExpr
s), andNegExpr
(containing a singleExpr
), we can match against anExpr
and act on the specific subtypes all in one step:int eval(Expr n) { return switch(n) { case IntExpr(int i) -> i; case NegExpr(Expr n) -> -eval(n); case AddExpr(Expr left, Expr right) -> eval(left) + eval(right); case MulExpr(Expr left, Expr right) -> eval(left) * eval(right); default -> throw new IllegalStateException(); }; }
Without such pattern matching, expressing ad-hoc polymorphic calculations like this requires using the cumbersome visitor pattern. Pattern matching is generally more transparent and straightforward.
-
It may also be useful to add AND and OR patterns, to allow more expressivity for
case
labels with patterns.
Alternatives
-
Rather than support a pattern
switch
we could instead define a typeswitch
that just supports switching on the type of the selector expression. This feature is simpler to specify and implement but considerably less expressive. -
There are many other syntactic options for guarded patterns, such as
p where e
,p when e
,p if e
, or evenp &&& e
. -
An alternative to guarded patterns is to support guards directly as a special form of
case
label:SwitchLabel: case Pattern [ when Expression ] ...
Supporting guards in
case
labels requires introducingwhen
as a new contextual keyword, whereas guarded patterns do not require new contextual keywords or operators. Guarded patterns offer considerably more flexibility, since a guarded pattern can occur near where it applies rather than at the end of the switch label.
Dependencies
This JEP builds on pattern matching for instanceof
(JEP 394) and
also the enhancements offered by switch
expressions (JEP 361). When
JEP 405 (Record Patterns & Array Patterns) appears, the resulting
implementation will likely make use of dynamic constants (JEP 309).