542

In Python you can do a:

from a import b as c

How would you do this in Java, as I have two imports that are clashing.

0

9 Answers 9

696

There is no import aliasing mechanism in Java. You cannot import two classes with the same name and use both of them unqualified.

Import one class and use the fully qualified name for the other one, i.e.

import com.text.Formatter;

private Formatter textFormatter;
private com.json.Formatter jsonFormatter;
13
  • 29
    That's the right answer and to that I'd only add what you have implied: no, there is no such aliasing syntax in Java.
    – Sean Owen
    Mar 15, 2010 at 14:42
  • 23
    Is this still a limitation in Java 8? May 14, 2014 at 20:28
  • 9
    @HairOfTheDog Nope, unfortunately no import aliasing have been added in Java8 Jun 5, 2014 at 14:20
  • 22
    Yeah I agree with your comment linuxdan... Java has gone the way of the dinosaur in terms of updates to its syntax. Feb 9, 2015 at 2:27
  • 6
    @Bozho The way python does: import [fully-qualified-name] as [ident]. The “as” keyword doesn’t seem to fit in Java as well, an alternative is approximately what C# uses: import [ident] = [fully-qualified-name].
    – Daniel H
    Feb 16, 2015 at 15:47
109

As the other answers already stated, Java does not provide this feature.

Implementation of this feature has been requested multiple times, e.g. as JDK-4194542: class name aliasing or JDK-4214789: Extend import to allow renaming of imported type.

From the comments:

This is not an unreasonable request, though hardly essential. The occasional use of fully qualified names is not an undue burden (unless the library really reuses the same simple names right and left, which is bad style).

In any event, it doesn't pass the bar of price/performance for a language change.

So I guess we will not see this feature in Java anytime soon :-P

21
  • 48
    wow! you weren't kidding about "not (...) anytime soon", I see that the feature request was dismissed as pointless sugar as far back as 1998! And every attempt to re-open the discussion during these past 18years have stranded on a reference to that ancient decision. I guess it would be easier to convince IDE-developers to implement this as a mask in the editor than to try to knock sense into Oracle.
    – Superole
    Sep 28, 2016 at 13:43
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    The old reasoning is correct though -- in practice these clashes very seldom occur.
    – slim
    Oct 22, 2016 at 18:53
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    I don't agree that these clashes rarely occur. Object orientation favors simple naming. I can have a class Employee from two different libraries that do separate things with an employee (for example). Mar 23, 2017 at 14:59
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    @slim "in practice these clashes very seldom occur". It is not clear to me why these situations would occur less frequently in java (where you can have 10.000+ classes) than in other languages (where you usually have less classes) which do support this "sugar" syntax. May 21, 2017 at 18:29
  • 51
    Absolutely incorrect. I'm facing a very simple scenario which is probably very common and where this syntactic sugar would be extremely helpful. Translation between related, but distinct object models (used in related but different products respectively) whose classes most of the time share the same name. The translation process requires you to refer to both classes in the same code block. In such a case (which must be very common), Java makes life very difficult. Just the number of views on this post should tell you the story.
    – hrishi1990
    Jun 12, 2017 at 6:30
94

It's probably worth noting that Groovy has this feature:

import java.util.Calendar
import com.example.Calendar as MyCalendar

MyCalendar myCalendar = new MyCalendar()
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  • 30
    In Scala it's: import com.example.{Calendar => MyCalendar}
    – pablisco
    May 14, 2016 at 1:50
  • 43
    And in Kotlin: import com.example.Calendar as MyCalendar.
    – KevinO
    Jan 6, 2017 at 0:39
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    In PHP it's : use com\example\Calendar as MyCalendar
    – matang
    Jan 31, 2017 at 6:41
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    It's quite annoying to see that (at least) 3 JVM-based languages (Groovy, Scala & Kotlin) have this feature but Java itself still doesn't ...
    – Matthias
    Feb 7, 2018 at 14:31
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    What about something like class MyCalendar extends com.example.Calendar {}? It's not ideal or pretty, but it should serve most purposes short of, say, reflection. You could even prepend it with a comment if necessary, like /* import com.example.Calendar as MyCalendar */. Apr 21, 2019 at 17:14
26

Java doesn't allow you to do that. You'll need to refer to one of the classes by its fully qualified name and only import the other one.

24

Today I filed a JEP draft to OpenJDK about this aliasing feature. I hope they will reconsider it.

If you are interested, you can find a JEP draft here: https://gist.github.com/cardil/b29a81efd64a09585076fe00e3d34de7

4
  • It's been more than 2years now, what's the status of your draft? Can't find it in the JEP listing Dec 9, 2021 at 9:25
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    Yeah, I did send that Draft to an email address as described in JEP 1, but I didn't receive any feedback. That's why I posted it to gist instead. Maybe it's a good idea to try submitting it once again. It looks like the process might have changed since then. Dec 13, 2021 at 14:52
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    @ChrisSuszyński any update on this? With jaav new approach to language features I'm really looking forward to this... Aug 17, 2022 at 7:01
  • it was dismissed 24 years ago and still is. I have no hopes. Well, I mostly write Kotlin these days
    – itsTyrion
    Dec 26, 2022 at 16:38
14

It's ridiculous that java doesn't have this yet. Scala has it

import com.text.Formatter
import com.json.{Formatter => JsonFormatter}

val Formatter textFormatter;
val JsonFormatter jsonFormatter;
1
  • 1
    python has it too
    – xjlin0
    Mar 9, 2023 at 0:09
6

Unless there are problems with non-default constructors you can always do this (while we all wait for the Java language specification to catch up):

public class YaddaYadda
{
    private static class ZU extends eu.zrbj.util.ZrbjUtil_3_0 { }

    public void foo (String s)
    {
        if (ZU.isNullOrEmpty(s))
        {
            // ...

For project-wide use the 'import' class can go into a separate class file, giving a single point of definition for the import.

This is a lifesaver especially with regard to 'library' classes, meaning collections of static utility functions. For one thing it gives you the ability to version these beasts - as shown in the example - without major inconvenience for the user.

0

Although Ballerina is a language which can be run on JVM, it also offers import aliasing.

import ballerina/jballerina.java.arrays as jarrays;
-5

Actually it is possible to create a shortcut so you can use shorter names in your code by doing something like this:

package com.mycompany.installer;
public abstract class ConfigurationReader {
    private static class Implementation extends com.mycompany.installer.implementation.ConfigurationReader {}
    public abstract String getLoaderVirtualClassPath();
    public static QueryServiceConfigurationReader getInstance() {
        return new Implementation();
    }
}

In that way you only need to specify the long name once, and you can have as many specially named classes you want.

Another thing I like about this pattern is that you can name the implementing class the same as the abstract base class, and just place it in a different namespace. That is unrelated to the import/renaming pattern though.

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    This is a very poor solution. It completely fails to deal with statics, may require constant updates, and doesn't help with de/serialisation problems (such as deserialising from xml through jaxb). Mar 9, 2016 at 13:52
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    The self-annointed 'Software Engineer' fails to realise two things. (1) Some of the problems he/she/it mentions apply equally to a hypothetical language-level solution. (2) A solution that does not work for some special cases may still work well for many other cases, in any case enough to be of use for the readers of this forum. Based on almost four decades of programming experience (three of which as a professional developer) I would call 4thex's solution a win. Not to forget that it is the only solution so far in the whole topic, after more than 10 years!
    – DarthGizka
    Jun 22, 2021 at 18:54
  • IMHO extending classes to work around the lack of import aliases is witty, but in the long term it seems to me that people will look at the code and say "wtf? what is this for?" And this is a best case scenario, where you don't need to worry about constructors and whatnot. Jul 18, 2023 at 15:25

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