One of the big advantages is: you don't have to run a Runnable
on a new thread.
One day, you might decide that instead of running it on a new thread, you should run it directly (on the current thread), or on a thread pool - and then you can change new Thread(runnable).start()
to threadPool.submit(runnable)
or runnable.run()
- and the change only affects one place.
Also, if you leave a Runnable
hanging around, it doesn't waste resources - it doesn't count towards the thread limit (if there is one), and it doesn't reserve space for a stack. Say you wanted to have a queue of things to do one at a time - sure, you could have a Queue<Thread>
and then start each thread when the previous one finished, but then you're wasting a lot of memory with non-running threads. If you used a queue of Runnable
s, you don't use as much memory except when they're actually running.