700 Software
700 Software

Reputation: 87853

Does Java Compiler include String Constant Folding?

I found out that Java supports constant folding of primitive types, but what about Strings?

Example

If I create the following source code

out.write(""
        + "<markup>"
        + "<nested>"
        + "Easier to read if it is split into multiple lines"
        + "</nested>"
        + "</markup>"
        + "");

What goes into the compiled code?

Combined Version? out.write("<markup><nested>Easier to read if it is split into multiple lines</nested></markup>");

Or the less efficient run-time concatenation version? out.write(new StringBuilder("").append("<markup>").append("<nested>").append("Easier to read if it is split into multiple lines").append("</nested>").append("</markup>").append(""));

Upvotes: 5

Views: 1115

Answers (3)

user1071777
user1071777

Reputation: 1307

It effectively translates to: out.write("<markup><nested>Easier to read if it is split into multiple lines</nested></markup>");

Upvotes: -1

Martijn Courteaux
Martijn Courteaux

Reputation: 68897

The combined version will be used.
The compiler optimises this automatically and puts it in the String Pool.

You can prove this behaviour easily by writing this line.

System.out.println("abc" == "a" + ("b" + "c")); // Prints true

That this prints true, means that it are the same objects. That is because of two things:

  1. The compiler optimised "a" + ("b" + "c") to "abc".
  2. The compiler puts all string literals in the string pool. This behaviour is called String Interning.

Upvotes: 2

Reverend Gonzo
Reverend Gonzo

Reputation: 40851

Here's an easy test:

public static void main(final String[] args) {
    final String a = "1" + "2";
    final String b = "12";        

    System.out.println(a == b);
}

Output:

true

So, yes, the compiler will fold.

Upvotes: 16

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