I was reading a book and there were a few example with programs that has just curly braces
for example
public static void main(String args[]){
//what is the uses of curly braces here.
{
//some code
}
}
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I was reading a book and there were a few example with programs that has just curly braces for example
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It's a code block. The variables declared in there are not visible in the upper block (method body outside of these curlies), i.e. they have a more limited scope. |
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Be careful, it is NOT ALWAYS an initialisation block as others have suggested. In your case it is a variable scoping mechanism called a Code Block or block. If it is outside of a method, then it is! Example
However, if it is inside a method, it is NOT! In this case (which is the case in your example), it is a code block. Anything initialised inside the curly braces is not visible outside Example
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It is called Block A block is a sequence of statements, local class declarations and local variable declaration statements within braces. Also See: |
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You can logically separate your code by this in some cases, and in fact there's one use case I apply very often: demo data. E.g., you have some demo data generation class that creates demo data entries and inserts into your database. You place each single item in such a block, and can do copy-paste without changing variable names. |
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This idea of how to use curly braces as a coding construct is a debated issue in the Java world . There are several explanations people come up with when they see curly braces by themselves. So Im going to try to answer your question from a practical perspective. The implied question in your post here is, really - when/why are these used ? Practically speaking, the following cases might result in a lone code block : 1) The programmer wanted additionally scoping to reuse variable names without fear of collisions for clarity (i.e. making several objects of the same type in a unit test or database insertion block). other possible reasons : 2) Forgotten if/else/for/while loop code that is under development. 3) Remaining artifact of a removed if/else/for/while clause. 4) Autogenerated code uses scoping to simplify the creation of several similar components with identical variable names (i.e. consider a gui generator that needed to make code for 100 radio buttons - rather than incrementing variable names per button, it could use scoping). 5) As a tiny, reusable, pastable logical block with minimal side effects : the programmer felt like a block of code in a method was so obscure, its variables and internal side effects should have minimal visibility to the outside world. That is, the programmer has used a code block as a poor-man's anonymous lambda function (albeit, one without a return value). In this pattern one might do something akin to the below :
Clearly, the simple strategy for naming this record (dogNameKey) is not worthy of an external method - its too simple. But at the same time, the "time" variable should have no bearing or accessibility outside the logic for making this name up - i.e. it shouldn't even be relevant to the method which contains this tiny key generating block. So, by using braces, I've scoped it out . If a labmda were possible, than all of this scoping could be wrapped in a single, anonymous function. Now - I could paste several of these blocks, and the variable names would be identical, so it would be easy to scan them by eye. *Thus, when you see curly braces by themselves - they usually are pretty important - either they implement a specific custom-scoping, or they are an artifact of an error or potentially of autogenerated code. Scoping can also be used to "start" the refactoring of a method without actually writing a new method, by separating out its independant parts ... although IDEs are much better at this than humans. * |
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