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Learn Java with Projects

You're reading from   Learn Java with Projects A concise practical guide to learning everything a Java professional really needs to know

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837637188
Length 598 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Maaike van Putten Maaike van Putten
Author Profile Icon Maaike van Putten
Maaike van Putten
Dr. Seán Kennedy Dr. Seán Kennedy
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Dr. Seán Kennedy
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Java Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Java FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Variables and Primitive Data Types 4. Chapter 3: Operators and Casting 5. Chapter 4: Conditional Statements 6. Chapter 5: Understanding Iteration 7. Chapter 6: Working with Arrays 8. Chapter 7: Methods 9. Part 2: Object-Oriented Programming
10. Chapter 8: Classes, Objects, and Enums 11. Chapter 9: Inheritance and Polymorphism 12. Chapter 10: Interfaces and Abstract Classes 13. Chapter 11: Dealing with Exceptions 14. Chapter 12: Java Core API 15. Part 3: Advanced Topics
16. Chapter 13: Generics and Collections 17. Chapter 14: Lambda Expressions 18. Chapter 15: Streams – Fundamentals 19. Chapter 16: Streams: Advanced Concepts 20. Chapter 17: Concurrency 21. Index

Explaining varargs

Consider the following situation: you want to call a method, m1, but the number of arguments may vary. Do you overload the method with each version of the method taking in one extra parameter? For example, assuming the argument types are of the String type, do you overload m1 when each new version takes in an extra String parameter? In this case, you would have to code m1(String), m1(String, String), m1(String, String, String), and so forth. This is not scalable.

This is where varargs comes in. varargs is a very flexible language feature in Java, specifically provided for this use case. The syntax is that the type name is followed by an ellipsis (three dots). Figure 7.10 shows varargs in action:

Figure 7.10 – varargs example

Figure 7.10 – varargs example

In this figure, on line 10, m1(int… ) defines a method signature for the m1 method, defining 0 or more int parameters. This is quite different from String[] defined on line 4 for main. In effect...

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