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Is 1/0 a legal Java expression?

Why does this code compile?

class Compiles {
    public final static int A = 7/0;
    public final static int B = 10*3;

    public static void main(String[] args) {}
}

If I take a look in the compiled class file, I can see that B has been evaluated to 30, and that A still is 7/0.

As far as I understand the JSL an expression where you divide by zero is not a constant.

Ref: JLS 15.28

My above statement is due to this line:

A compile-time constant expression is an expression denoting a value of primitive type

Hence dividing by zero is not evaluated to a primitive value.

What I really dont understand is why the compiler allows this anyway? Just to be clear, my code above crashes runtime with a "java.lang.ExceptionInInitializerError"

As it seems to me the compiler threats any final static variable as a constant and evaluates it compile time. That means that the compiler already has tried to evaluate A, but since it was a division by zero it just let it go through. No compile time error. But this seems very very bizarre... The compiler knows it is a divide by zero and that it will crash runtime but nevertheless it doesn't flag a compile error!

Can anyone explain to me why?

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1  
Is there any instance of division by zero producing compile-time errors at all? If you divided by zero in normal procedural code you would get an ArithmeticException in runtime, so I see nothing surprising about this getting through the compiler too. – BoltClock Feb 12 '11 at 20:20
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closed as exact duplicate by Andrew White, Wooble, axtavt, Jigar Joshi, John Saunders Feb 12 '11 at 21:24

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

2 Answers

To throw an java.lang.ExceptionInInitializerError is the only correct behavior.

If your code did not compile, a perfectly valid Java program would have been rejected, and that would have been a bug.

The only correct alternative to putting 7/0 in the compiled code, would actually be to explicitly throw a ExceptionInInitializerError, but how much more useful is that?

The compiler knows it is a divide by zero and that it will crash runtime but nevertheless it does flag a compile error!

Actually, I wouldn't agree with that... would this program crash?

class Compiles {
    public final static int A = 7/0;
    public final static int B = 10*3;

    public static void main(String[] args) {}

}

public class Test {

    // Application entry point.
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        try {
            new Compiles();

            launchTheMissiles();

        } catch (ExceptionInInitializerError e) {

            doUsefulStuff();

        }
    }
}
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Your program will not crash. But mine will. So you will always put initialization of new objects in a try/catch?? – laitinen Feb 12 '11 at 20:32
Yes. I always put try/catch around instantiations of ExceptionInitializerError-classes. ;-D – aioobe Feb 12 '11 at 20:35
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JLS 15.28 Constant Expression:

A compile-time constant expression is an expression denoting a value of primitive type or a String that does not complete abruptly and is composed using only the following:

...

Therefore 7/0 is not a compile-time constant, since its evaluation completes abruptly due to division by zero. So, it's treated as a regular run-time expression, and throws an exception in runtime.

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That was what I said! I totally agree. But I find it weird that it doesnt flag it as a compile error, since the compiler already has evaluated the expression? – laitinen Feb 12 '11 at 20:29
3  
If you agree that it is not a compile-time constant, then you shouldn't be surprised that the evaluation is deferred to runtime, and consequently throw an exception. – aioobe Feb 12 '11 at 20:30
1  
that's probably a patch to justify existing javac behavior (can't change it due to backward compatibility). the spec could have very well said: "blah blah, and it is a compile time error if the expression doesn't compute" – irreputable Feb 13 '11 at 1:06
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