Book Image

Java 11 and 12 ??? New Features

By : Mala Gupta
Book Image

Java 11 and 12 ??? New Features

By: Mala Gupta

Overview of this book

With its new six-monthly release cadence, Java is moving forward faster. In addition to planned version releases, a lot of work is currently being undertaken on various Java projects at Oracle. In order to make best use of the new features in their applications and libraries, you must be well-versed with the most recent advancements. Java 11 and 12 – New Features will take you through the latest developments in Java, right from variable type inference and simplified multithreading through to performance improvements, which are covered in depth to help you make your applications more efficient. This book explains the relevance and applicability of Java's new features, and answers your questions on whether to invest in migrating to new Java versions and when to migrate. You'll also get to grips with platform features, such as AppCDS and new garbage collectors, to tune and optimize your application—from reduced launch time and latency to improved performance and throughput. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with a thorough understanding of the new features of Java 11, 12, and Project Amber, and possess the skills to apply them with a view to improving your application's performance.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: JDK 10
6
Section 2: JDK 11
13
Section 3: JDK 12
16
Section 4: Project Amber

A preview language feature

A switch expression is a preview language feature (JEP 12). This essentially means that, even though it is complete, it has a possibility of not being confirmed as a permanent feature in a future Java release. This happens for a reason.

Java runs on billions of devices and is used by millions of developers. The risks are high for any mistake in a new Java language feature. Before permanently adding a language feature to Java, the architects of Java evaluate what the developers have to say about it—that is, how good or bad it is. Depending on the feedback, a preview language feature might be refined before it's added to Java SE or dropped completely. So, if you have any feedback on switch expressions, please share it with amber-dev (https://mail.openjdk.java.net/mailman/listinfo/amber-dev).