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We are always taught to make sure we use a break in switch statements to avoid fall-through.

The JAVA compiler warns about these situations to help us not make trivial (but drastic) errors.

I have however used case fall-through as a feature (We don't have to get into it here but it provides a very elegant solution).

However the compiler spits out massive amounts of warnings that may obscure warnings that I need to know about. I know how I can change the compiler to ignore ALL fall through warnings, but I would like to implement this on a method by method basis to avoid missing a place where I did not intend for fall-through to happen.

Any Ideas?

Thanks

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By fall through, do you mean fall through on switch statements? – Elijah Feb 27 at 8:55
As Ron talk about the break in case statements, yes. – Nicolas Feb 27 at 8:58
yea sorry I suppose switch statment is more accurate than case (edited above) – Ron Tuffin Feb 27 at 9:20

4 Answers

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If you really, really must do this, and you are sure you are not making a mistake, check out the @SuppressWarnings annotation. I suppose in your case you need

@SuppressWarnings("fallthrough")
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Is the annotation @SuppressWarnings (javadoc) what you are looking for?

For example:

@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
public void someMethod(...) {
    ...
}
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I think it must be @SuppressWarnings("fallthrough") instead of "unchecked" (java-tips.org/java-se-tips/java.lang/…) – Tobias Schulte Feb 27 at 8:53
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To complete other answer about SuppressWarnings:

@SuppressWarnings("fallthrough")

Try to supress all the fall-through warning at the compiler level is a bad thing: as you've explained, the cases where you need to pass through the warning are clearly identified. Thus, it should be explicitly written in the code (the @SuppressWarnings("fallthrough") annotation with an optionnal comment is welcome). Doing so, you'll still have the fall-through warning if you really forget a break somewhere elese in your code.

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With double quotes... – Tom Hawtin - tackline Feb 27 at 10:12
oops, thanks, i've changed it. – Nicolas Feb 27 at 10:52
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Java doesn't seem to have it but in some languages (like c# and D) you can end a case section with a goto case n; case n: that makes the fall through explicet and also prevents adding or reordering cases from mucking up stuff.

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