Book Image

Learning Java Lambdas

By : Toby Weston
Book Image

Learning Java Lambdas

By: Toby Weston

Overview of this book

In this short book, we take an in-depth look at lambdas in Java, and their supporting features. The book covers essential topics, such as functional interfaces and type inference, and the key differences between lambdas and closures. You will learn about the background to functional programming and lambdas, before moving on to understanding the basic syntax of lambdas and what differentiates these anonymous functions from standard anonymous classes. Lastly, you'll learn how to invoke lambdas and look at the bytecode generated. After reading this book, you'll understand lambdas in depth, their background, syntax, implementation details, and how and when to use them. You'll also have a clear knowledge of the difference between functions and classes, and why that's relevant to lambdas. This knowledge will enable you to appreciate the improvements to type inference that drive a lot of the new features in modern Java, and will increase your understanding of method references and scoping.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Type inference improvements


There have been several type inference improvements in modern Java. To be able to support lambdas, the way the compiler infers things has been improved to use target typing extensively. This and other improvements over Java 7's inference were managed under the Open JDK Enhancement Proposal (JEP) 101.

Before we get into those, lets recap on the basics.

Type inference refers to the ability for a programming language to automatically deduce the type of an expression.

Statically typed languages know the types of things at compile time. Dynamically typed languages know the types at runtime. A statically typed language can use type inference and drop type information in source code and use the compiler to figure out what's missing.

So this means that type inference can be used by statically typed languages (like Scala) to "look" like dynamic languages (like JavaScript). At least at the source code level.

Here's an example of a line of code in Scala:

val name = "Henry"

You...