Book Image

Java Coding Problems - Second Edition

By : Anghel Leonard
Book Image

Java Coding Problems - Second Edition

By: Anghel Leonard

Overview of this book

The super-fast evolution of the JDK between versions 12 and 21 has made the learning curve of modern Java steeper, and increased the time needed to learn it. This book will make your learning journey quicker and increase your willingness to try Java’s new features by explaining the correct practices and decisions related to complexity, performance, readability, and more. Java Coding Problems takes you through Java’s latest features but doesn’t always advocate the use of new solutions — instead, it focuses on revealing the trade-offs involved in deciding what the best solution is for a certain problem. There are more than two hundred brand new and carefully selected problems in this second edition, chosen to highlight and cover the core everyday challenges of a Java programmer. Apart from providing a comprehensive compendium of problem solutions based on real-world examples, this book will also give you the confidence to answer questions relating to matching particular streams and methods to various problems. By the end of this book you will have gained a strong understanding of Java’s new features and have the confidence to develop and choose the right solutions to your problems.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Text Blocks, Locales, Numbers, and Math
Free Chapter
2
Objects, Immutability, Switch Expressions, and Pattern Matching
14
Other Books You May Enjoy
15
Index

147. Motivating and introducing Project Panama

Project Panama, or the Foreign Function & Memory (FFM) API, is an elegant way of saying goodbye to JNI. This project started in JDK 17 as JEP 412 (first incubator). It continued in JDK 18 as JEP 419 (second incubator), JDK 19 as JEP 424 (first preview), JDK 20 as JEP 434 (second preview), and JDK 21 as JEP 442 (third preview). This is where things are at the time of writing.

To understand the goals of this project, we have to talk about accessing off-heap memory from Java applications. By off-heap memory, we mean the memory that is outside the JVM heap and is not managed by the garbage collector.

Surfing off-heap is the job of JNI, JNA, and JNR. In one way or another, these APIs can work in off-heap land to handle different tasks. Among these tasks, we can enumerate the following:

  • Use native libraries (for instance, some common libraries are Open CL/GL, CUDA, TensorFlow, Vulkan, OpenSSL, V8, BLAS, cuDNN, and so...