I was converting a Groovy codebase into Java and forgot to change
public static void main(String... args) {
to
public static void main(String args[]) {
and compiled and ran the project all this time only to be surprised only now that this is legal Java 8 code.
I understand that Java 8 Varargs makes it possible for a function to have arbitrary number of arguments, "compacting them into an Array" depending on their position on the method call.
But the way functions with String... args
and String[] args
are called syntactically differently:
void function1 (String[] args) {}
function1({"one", "two", "three"});
void function2 (String... args) {}
function2("one", "two", "three");
So how is String... args
as legal as String args[]
when grabbing params from the terminal?
Edit:
azurefrog linked an answer to a different question that is great. I wanted to mention another answer where the comments provide the answer I was looking for:
Why doesn't Java's main use a variable length argument list?
Comment 1: Interesting. Judging by the other answers/comments, I guess this new main declaration syntax was added with Java 1.5. So the Java runtime determines, based on your main method declaration, whether to pass the strings directly to the main or build an array first?
Comment 2: No, it always builds an array. String... args == String[]
args, as far as the called method is concerned. The parameter is an array in any case
That's the question I had. Sorry if it was asked poorly.