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Mastering Java 11

You're reading from   Mastering Java 11 Develop modular and secure Java applications using concurrency and advanced JDK libraries

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789137613
Length 462 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Dr. Edward Lavieri Jr. Dr. Edward Lavieri Jr.
Author Profile Icon Dr. Edward Lavieri Jr.
Dr. Edward Lavieri Jr.
Mandar Jog Mandar Jog
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Mandar Jog
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Java 11 Landscape FREE CHAPTER 2. Discovering Java 11 3. Java 11 Fundamentals 4. Building Modular Applications with Java 11 5. Migrating Applications to Java 11 6. Experimenting with the Java Shell 7. Leveraging the Default G1 Garbage Collector 8. Microbenchmarking Applications with JMH 9. Making Use of the Process API 10. Fine-Grained Stack Tracing 11. New Tools and Tool Enhancements 12. Concurrency Enhancements 13. Security Enhancements 14. Command-Line Flags 15. Additional Enhancements to the Java Platform 16. Future Directions 17. Contributing to the Java Platform 18. Assessment 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

StackFrame

In previous sections, we iterated through the StackFrame elements and provided sample code snippets. Next, we will examine it more closely. StackFrame is an interface defined inside the StackWalker class. It defines accessors and is a converter that can be used to convert the information to StackTraceElement.

The accessors the interface defines are the following:

  • getClassName() will return the binary name of the class of the method represented by StackFrame.
  • getMethodName() will return the name of the method represented by StackFrame.
  • getDeclaringClass() will return the class of the method represented by StackFrame. If Option.RETAIN_CLASS_REFERENCE was not used during the creation of the StackWalker instance, the method will throw UnsupportedOperationException.
  • getByteCodeIndex() gets the index to the code array containing the execution point of the method represented...
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