10

Is there in Java 8 any analogue for implements keyword for methods?

Let's say I have a functional interface:

@FunctionalInterface
interface LongHasher {
    int hash(long x);
}

And a library of 3 static methods "implementing" this functional interface:

class LongHashes {
    static int xorHash(long x) {
        return (int)(x ^ (x >>> 32));
    }
    static int continuingHash(long x) {
        return (int)(x + (x >>> 32));
    }
    static int randomHash(long x) {
         return xorHash(x * 0x5DEECE66DL + 0xBL);
    }
}

In the future I want to be able to interchangeably use any of references to these 3 methods as a parameter. For example:

static LongHashMap createHashMap(LongHasher hasher) { ... }
...
public static void main(String[] args) {
    LongHashMap map = createHashMap(LongHashes::randomHash);
    ...
}

How can I ensure at compile time that LongHashes::xorHash, LongHashes::continuingHash and LongHashes::randomHash have the same signature as LongHasher.hash(long x)?

1
  • 2
    An (unrelated) aside: Your hash function looks like a LongToIntFunction. (I'm not sure whether one should introduce such a (new) interface that is "structurally equal" to an existing one - but maybe there is some benefit in giving it a name that suggests what it will be used for...)
    – Marco13
    May 12, 2015 at 17:01

6 Answers 6

9

I had wished for this too, in the past, but no you can't do that. But you know. There was Java before Java 8. Do this instead:

enum LongHashes implements LongHasher {
    XOR {
        @Override
        public int hash(long x) { ... }
    },
    CONTINUING {
        @Override
        public int hash(long x) { ... }
    },
    RANDOM {
        @Override
        public int hash(long x) { ... }
    }
}

And then:

public static void main(String[] args) {
    LongHashMap map = createHashMap(LongHashes.RANDOM);
    ...
}
6
  • 2
    that's good for pre-8. in java 8 it's simpler with direct lambda XOR=x->...
    – ZhongYu
    May 12, 2015 at 17:01
  • 3
    @Yahor If you mean whether the code in the answer is possible, absolutely. If you mean whether XOR=x-> is possible in enum, no; but you don't need enum, just declare static fields LongHasher XOR=x->{...} it pretty much look like a simple method.
    – ZhongYu
    May 12, 2015 at 17:13
  • 1
    @bayou.io: Just because you can doesn't mean you have to. I just wanted to point out that developers don't need to shoehorn everything into functions now.
    – Lukas Eder
    May 12, 2015 at 20:29
  • 1
    And there have been thoughts about enum and functions before…
    – Holger
    May 13, 2015 at 8:23
  • 2
    @Lukas Eder: I just wanted to point to that previously made thoughts because bayou.io’s comment sounded like combining lambda expressions with enum wasn’t possible and I thought, linking can avoid long discussions within the comments.
    – Holger
    May 13, 2015 at 11:59
8

There's no such syntax construction you're asking for. However you can create a static constant where you explicitly assign the method reference to your interface:

class LongHashes {
    private static final LongHasher XOR_HASH = LongHashes::xorHash;
    private static final LongHasher CONTINUING_HASH = LongHashes::continuingHash;
    private static final LongHasher RANDOM_HASH = LongHashes::randomHash;

    static int xorHash(long x) {
        return (int)(x ^ (x >>> 32));
    }
    static int continuingHash(long x) {
        return (int)(x + (x >>> 32));
    }
    static int randomHash(long x) {
         return xorHash(x * 0x5DEECE66DL + 0xBL);
    }
}

This way your compilation will break if either method signature or interface changes in incompatible way. If you want you may declare them public and use instead of method references.

If you care that these static lambdas will be hanging in memory at runtime, you can move this declaration to the separate class (for example, nested), which compiles but never loaded.

1
  • This approach in a private static method will be shorter: LongHasher[] longHashes = {LongHashes::xorHash, LongHashes::randomHash, LongHashes::continuingHash};.
    – Yahor
    May 12, 2015 at 17:31
3

You could declare function objects, instead of methods.

class LongHashes {

    static final LongHasher xorHash = x -> {
        return (int)(x ^ (x >>> 32));
    };

    ... etc


    LongHashMap map = createHashMap(LongHashes.randomHash);
1

One way would be to return a LongHasher directly from the LongHashes class:

class LongHashes {
  private static int xorHashImpl(long x) {
    return (int)(x ^ (x >>> 32));
  }
  static LongHasher xorHash() {
    return LongHashes::xorHashImpl;
  }
}

but that adds some code to your LongHashes class and ties it to the LongHasher interface, which may not be desirable (although that's essentially what you are asking for).

1
  • 1
    it can be simplified even more, can't it:) you don't need the xorHashImpl method, just do inline lambda; and you don't need xorHash as a method, just have a static field.
    – ZhongYu
    May 12, 2015 at 17:16
1

Or just create 3 classes which implement LongHasher. When you need a LongHasher, get or create an instance and pass it:

LongHasher longHasher = ... // new RandomLongHasher(), factory, .......
LongHashMap map = createHashMap(longHasher);

Writing functions as static methods here:

  • makes it difficult to understand
  • sounds like reinventing the wheel; the wheel being interfaces/classes, reinventing being hinted by the use of "interface" between quotes in the problem description ;-)

We're not forced to use lambdas everywhere.

0

Although I find Tagir's answer a nice hack, it's easy to forget adding the private constant when one creates a new hasher.

As usual, when dealing with potential refactoring problems, I think that testing is the answer:

public class LongHashesTest {

    @Test
    public void xorHash() {
        LongHasher xorHash = LongHashes::xorHash;

        assertEquals(1768181579, xorHash.hash(34312465426524234l));
    }

    @Test
    public void continuingHash() {
        LongHasher continuingHash = LongHashes::continuingHash;

        assertEquals(1529080340, continuingHash.hash(74543524355l));
    }

    @Test
    public void randomHash() {
        LongHasher randomHash = LongHashes::randomHash;

        assertEquals(-1100764221, randomHash.hash(4343245345432154353l));
    }
}

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