Which is faster in Java, and why?
try {
object.doSomething()
} catch (NullPointerException e) {
if (object == null) {
object = new .....;
object.doSomething();
} else throw e;
}
or
if (object == null) {
object = new .....;
}
object.doSomething();
and why?
The code would be called often, and object is only null the first time it's called, so don't take the cost of the thrown NPEinto account (it only happens once).
P.S. I know the second is better because of simplicity, readability, etc, and I'd surely go for that in real software. I know all about the evil of premature optimization, no need to mention it. I'm merely curious about these little details.