What is the equivalent to Python's pass
in Java? I realize that I could use continue
or not complete the body of a statement to achieve that effect, but I like having a pass
statement.
6 Answers
Just use a semi-colon ;
, it has the same effect.
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@TonyCeralva: The question asked for a statement that does nothing, not a statement that prevents compiler optimizations. Jun 9, 2020 at 22:00
If you want something noticeable, you can use
assert true;
This will allow you to have something that a reader can recognize or that can be searched for.
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4
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1@user3282276 It is not the same, but an
assert true
is always performed and it is easy to identify as part of a debug statement. When there is no explicit no-op command it is better than an empty statement. That was the point that I was trying to make. Jun 22, 2018 at 11:55 -
@user3282276 the OP wanted something to use instead of an empty statement. Since there is no no-op or pass then this can be used instead Jun 24, 2018 at 17:59
;
;
is the empty statement. Usually, you don't need it - you can just put nothing in the brackets for an empty loop - but it can be useful.
I normally use something like:
"".isEmpty(); // do nothing
It's useful to be able to have a line of code which does nothing when debugging. You can put a breakpoint on that line, which is especially useful if it would usually be an empty block of code (e.g. empty catch block etc), as putting a breakpoint on an empty line can create confusion about where the breakpoint is actually set.
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1I think this is the most genius answer, would use this instead of a bland semicolon– DaneologJan 21, 2022 at 21:53
There is no (strict) equivalent since in java you have to specify the return type for the method in its declaration which is then checked against a computed type of the following the return statement. So for methods that have a return type - neither semicollon nor leaving empty braces will work;
I personally use: throw new java.lang.UnsupportedOperationException("Not supported yet.");
- this is searchable, alerts you that the method is not implemented and is compatible with the strict return types.
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1don't a method with
no operation
can't throw any exceptions, because it does nothigng? Dec 11, 2020 at 5:56
I feel, there is no construct in Java identical to pass in Python. This is mostly because Java is a statically typed language where as Python is a dynamically typed language. More so when you are defining a method / function. In that context, the provided answers are valid / correct only for a method that returns void.
For example for a Python function
def function_returns_void:
pass
you can have a Java method
public void function_returns_void(){}
or
public void function_returns_void(){;}
but when a method is supposed to return a value, while pass may still work in Python, one will stuck with compilation problem when not returning a value.
{ }
pass
on methods which normally return a value), but there are "do nothing"s. What is it that you want to do exactly? In what context?