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I was just reading a Java7 preview presentation (pdf) and there was a slide on Chained Invocation. Here is the example used in the slide:
And I have mixed feelings about this. One shouldn't chain too many method invocations into one statement. OTOH, writing margarita.this() ans and margarita.that() isn't too convenient either. Now, I am coming to Java from Delphi world. And in Delphi there is the with language construct. This is cherished by a few and loathed by many (or is it the other way around?). I find with to be more elegant than the idea of chained invocation (which I believe works on the basis of I would appreciate the with language feature being adopted by Java, so the example code could be written like so:
Am I the only one who would prefer this solution to the chained invocation? Anyone else feels that with could be a useful extension to Java language? (Reminds me of someone's question about the need of "Java++"...) |
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Chained invocation in Java 7?I was just reading a Java7 preview presentation (pdf) and there was a slide on Chained Invocation. Here is the example used in the slide:
And I have mixed feelings about this. One shouldn't chain too many method invocations into one statement. OTOH, writing margarita.this() ans margarita.that() isn't too convenient either. Now, I am coming to Java from Delphi world. And in Delphi there is the with language construct. This is cherished by a few and loathed by many (or is it the other way around?). I find with to be more elegant than the idea of chained invocation (which I believe works on the basis of I would appreciate the with language feature being adopted by Java, so the example code could be written like so:
Am I the only one who would prefer this solution to the chained invocation? Anyone else feels that with could be a useful extension to Java language? (Reminds me of someone's question about the need of "Java++"...)
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