Just a brief comment to say that the compiler cannot optimize it in all cases, because name
is visible within the first if
block therefore it could have been modified in it, so it has to be checked again in the second if
condition. Imagine this case:
if (name == null) {
// Does something
name = "Did it.";
}
if (name != null) {
// Does something else
}
It's clearly not equivalent to
if (name == null) {
// Does something
name = "Did it.";
} else {
// Does something else
}
If what you actually mean is that you should do something in one case and something else otherwise, please use if { ... } else { ... }
- not just for (minimal) performance improvement, but also because your code should reflect what you actually mean.