19

Is it possible to do something like this in Java

private ? /* (I dont know what Class to use) */ shortcutToMethod = redundantMethod(game.getGraphics());

So instead of calling redundantMethod(game.getGraphics().doThisMethod());

I could just do shortCutToMethod.doThisMethod();

Is this possible?

12
  • 2
    Maybe you can get a better answer if you show a longer piece of code where you want to have this.
    – Thilo
    Jan 22, 2019 at 7:42
  • 3
    Functional interfaces is what you are looking for. Technically they are regular interfaces, where you assign an instance of a type that implements it. Syntactically, there are some shortcuts that makes it fell like a method or function. Jan 22, 2019 at 7:44
  • 5
    Did you mean redundantMethod(game.getGraphics()).doThisMethod()? It's hard to see how you'd specify that you want to call doThisMethod() on the result of game.getGraphics() and then call redundantMethod passing the result. A complete example would make it much easier to understand what you're trying to achieve.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 22, 2019 at 7:45
  • 5
    @AlexeiKaigorodov: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Function_pointer Jan 22, 2019 at 7:52
  • 2
    @AlexeiKaigorodov "do you know any language where it is possible?" Any language where function/method/procedures are first class citizens. Scheme, Haskell, Scala, OCaml, Javascript, to name a few.
    – ghilesZ
    Jan 22, 2019 at 11:54

4 Answers 4

25

Java 8 has introduced the idea of a Functional Interface, which allows you to essentially assign methods to variables. It includes a number of commonly-used interfaces as well.

Common examples:

  • Consumer<T> - a method that takes in T and returns void
  • Function<T, R> - a method that takes in T and returns R
  • Supplier<R> - a method that takes no arguments and returns R
  • Runnable - a method that takes no arguments and returns void
  • Predicate<T> - a method that takes in T and returns boolean

In your case, you appear to be after a Runnable:

Runnable shortcutToMethod = () -> redundantMethod(game.getGraphics());
shortcutToMethod.run();
2
  • returns void not sure if returning nothing counts as something ;)
    – Lino
    Jan 22, 2019 at 7:47
  • 1
    @KamilDrakari Yup, that was rather silly of me, thanks for the correction.
    – Joe C
    Jan 22, 2019 at 18:13
23

In Java, there are various ways. If you take a look at java.util.function package, you can see

  • Function: Takes one argument, produces one result
  • Consumer: Takes one argument, produces nothing.
  • BiConsumer: Takes two arguments, produces nothing.
  • Supplier: Takes no argument, produces one result.
  • Predicate: Boolean value function of one argument

You can used them as inputs for your method and execute it within.

1
  • 4
    Actually, this will create instances of an Interface instead of linking to the method. It might be worth also mentioning Reflection. Because there you can actually refer to a certain method and apply them to arguments.
    – Zabuzard
    Jan 22, 2019 at 7:59
2

You can use functional interfaces. A functional interface allows one to adapt an abstract method to a lambda expression that can in turn be stored in a variable, and that's close to storing a method in a variable.

There are a number of functional interfaces available in Java (you can design others yourself). For example, if your redundantMethod returns nothing, you can use a functional interface appropriate for that:

private Consumer<Graphics> shortcutToMethod = 
           graphics -> redundantMethod(game.getGraphics());

It can even go with a method reference:

private Consumer<Graphics> shortcutToMethod = this::redundantMethod; //some rules apply

And that can be called with:

shortcutToMethod.accept(game.getGraphics());

Consumer is one of the functional interfaces that come with Java, and it declares the abstract method accept that is called above. There are others that you can find in the java.util.function package, and you choose or write a particular functional interface based on what signature your particular method has. See java.util.function package for more information.

2

Well in addition to what the others already wrote. Assuming the returntype is "Graphics" here are 4 examples:

//You need some kind of forward declaration, name don't matter:
public static interface FunctionDeclaration{
    public Graphics doThisMethod();
}

//here you go and assing your variable
private FunctionDeclaration shortCutToMethod = game.getGraphics()::doThisMethod;
//or you want this - not sure?
// private FunctionDeclaration shortCutToMethod = game::getGraphics;
// and then you just call it:
shortCutToMethod.doThisMethod();

If you want to pass the graphics

//You need some kind of forward declaration, name don't matter:
public static interface FunctionDeclaration{
    public Graphics doThisMethod(Graphics g);
}
//assign your variable
private FunctionDeclaration shortCutToMethod = param -> param.doThisMethod();
//and call it - calls game.getGraphics().doThisMethod()
shortCutToMethod.doThisMethod(game.getGraphics());

If your "redundant" method does something:

//You need some kind of forward declaration, name don't matter:
public static interface FunctionDeclaration{
    public Graphics doThisMethod(Graphics g);
}
//assign your variable
private FunctionDeclaration shortCutToMethod = param -> redundantMethod(param.doThisMethod());
//and call it - calls redundantMethod(game.getGraphics().doThisMethod())
shortCutToMethod.doThisMethod(game.getGraphics());

If your redundant method does somthing without passing graphics:

//You need some kind of forward declaration, name don't matter:
public static interface FunctionDeclaration{
    public Graphics doThisMethod();
}
//assign your variable
private FunctionDeclaration shortCutToMethod = () -> redundantMethod(game.getGraphics().doThisMethod());
//and call it - calls redundantMethod(game.getGraphics().doThisMethod())
shortCutToMethod.doThisMethod();

And so on ... Sure enough for the forward declaration you can use any existing interface like the predefined ones Joe and others mentioned(eg. Supplier).

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.