More than just not saving the result, Java will outright refuse to compile your program if it contains such a line, precisely because the result would be unsaved and unusable if it was allowed:
public class Main
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
1+2;
}
}
Result:
Main.java:5: error: not a statement
1+2;
^
1 error
Java does not allow arbitrary expressions as statements, and addition expressions are not considered valid Java statements.
The expressions that are allowed as statements by themselves are listed in the JLS:
ExpressionStatement:
StatementExpression ;
StatementExpression:
Assignment
PreIncrementExpression
PreDecrementExpression
PostIncrementExpression
PostDecrementExpression
MethodInvocation
ClassInstanceCreationExpression
Assignment, increment, decrement, method calls, and new Whatever()
, all things with side effects or potential side effects. Barring possible side effects of an implicit toString()
call, +
cannot have side effects, so to catch probable errors, Java forbids addition expressions from being statements.
_
global, which is not present in the Python interpreter for programs