There are a number of answers far, but I agree with Bohemian's answer that the most straightforward simplification (although it doesn't use ||
) is this:
if ( !set1.add(x) ) set2.add(x);
That doesn't explain the error message though. Mustafa Genç comes closer on this, but I think it's worthwhile to look at the language specification here. exp1 || exp2
is an expression, and the problem here is that you're trying to use it in a context where a statement is expected. According to 14.8. Expression Statements, some kinds of expressions can be used where statements are expected by attaching a semicolon:
Certain kinds of expressions may be used as statements by following
them with semicolons.
ExpressionStatement:
StatementExpression ;
StatementExpression:
Assignment
PreIncrementExpression
PreDecrementExpression
PostIncrementExpression
PostDecrementExpression
MethodInvocation
ClassInstanceCreationExpression
An expression statement is executed by evaluating the expression; if
the expression has a value, the value is discarded.
The reason that you can't do what you're trying to do, though, is that not every expression can be used as a statement. However, it does discuss some ways to work around this. From the same section of the specification (emphasis added):
Unlike C and C++, the Java programming language allows only certain
forms of expressions to be used as expression statements. Note that
the Java programming language does not allow a "cast to void
" - void
is not a type - so the traditional C trick of writing an expression
statement such as:
(void)... ; // incorrect!
does not work. On the other hand, the Java
programming language allows all the most useful kinds of expressions
in expressions statements, and it does not require a method invocation
used as an expression statement to invoke a void method, so such a
trick is almost never needed. If a trick is needed, either an
assignment statement (§15.26) or a local variable declaration
statement (§14.4) can be used instead.
This approach is what the first snipped in Reik Val's answer is using:
boolean temp = set1.add(x) || set2.add(x);
boolean temp = set1.add(x) || set2.add(x);
.set1.add(x) ? false : set2.add(x)
? (Haven't tried it, and the Java rules are obscure at times, so I'm not claiming it will work any better.)bool foo(){return true;} bool bar(){return true;} int main(){ foo() || bar(); return 0;}
is valid C and C++. So it must be some oddity in JLS grammar or a compile bug.