Tips for golfing in Java
This is a list of golfing tips for the language known as Java. If you have a tip, add it in!
Use higher versions of Java …
3y ago
Use `interface` The special …
3y ago
Abuse anonymous classes War …
3y ago
Abuse the C-like array syntax …
3y ago
Use `for(;;)` instead of `whil …
3y ago
A clever way to replace `Math` …
3y ago
Booleans are replaceable Ja …
3y ago
7 answers
Use interface
The special thing about this is that it lets you drop public
when you originally call a class
to run the main
function.
class F{public static void main(String[]a{}}
interface M{static void main(String[]a){}}
Used on "Hello, {name}!"
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Use higher versions of Java
Seriously, it's crazy what sort of features have been added since Java 8. I hardly recognize the language anymore...
Examples:
Constructing Lists
Before, you had to do something like Arrays.asList(new String[]{"a", "b", "c"})
, but in Java 9+ you have List.of("a", "b", "c")
, some huge savings.
var
keyword
Self explanatory - since Java 10, instead of ReallyLongTypeName a = x();
, you now can just do var a = x();
.
Strings
In Java 11, some cool stuff for Strings was added that could potentially be useful - for example, .lines()
returns the String separated by newlines as a Stream (saving over .split("\n")
).
Fancy switch statements
Before:
switch(thing){case A:return "a";case B:return "b";default:return "x";}
Java 13+:
return switch(thing){case A->"a";case B->"b";default->"x";}
You can even have blocks of statements in any of the cases using {}
.
There are many other new features that I did not think are relavant to golf, and many many others that I'm sure I missed - there is just so much stuff to unpack. Please contribute if you find something I missed!
1 comment thread
Use for(;;)
instead of while(true)
The title's self-explanatory. A byte saver.
0 comment threads
Abuse the C-like array syntax
If you ever have to declare two variables, one of type X
and the other of type X[]
, instead of two statements, you can declare them together using this atrocious syntax:
int i,a[],m[][];
This defines an int i
, an int[] a
, and an int[][] m
.
Fun fact
This also works with method return types, and can actually be useful if you want to apply annotations to the type an array holds, e.g.
public @NotNull String foo() @Nullable [] {}
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Abuse anonymous classes
Warning: This only works in very specific circumstances, and I've never actually needed it.
Instead of defining a method outside of your method, you can make an instance of an anonymous class to act as a closure. This'll only really help if what the method is closing over has a very long type or name. Here's an extremely contrived example where an extra method is defined because recursion is needed.
int g(List<Integer>b){return new Object(){int f(int x){return x>b.get(0)?f(x-1)*2:1;}}.f(3);}
The one above is 93 bytes, the one below is 97.
int g(List<Integer>b){return f(b,3);}int f(List<Integer>b,int x){return x>b.get(0)?f(b,x-1)*2:1;}
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Booleans are replaceable
Java, like Python, has pretty convenient yet nasty ways to golfing down code through comparison operators. Especially this case, this time with booleans. You can compare int
s and it will result to either false
or true
, which helps you break 1 and 2 bytes respectively.
static void main(String[]a){
System.out.println(1<0);
System.out.println(1>0);
}
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A clever way to replace Math
functions
You can shorten if-else
statements through the a?b:c
syntax, where a
is the statement of if
, b
is the result of if
, and c
is the result of else
.
static void main(String[]a){
int i = 95;
System.out.print(i>0?"positive":"negative/zero");
}
With this, you can take out the following functions from java.util.Math
:
-
Math.max()
andMath.min()
import java.util.*;
interface M{
static void main(String[]x){
int a = 20, b = 30;
System.out.println(Math.max(a,b));
System.out.println(a>b?a:b);
System.out.println(Math.min(a,b));
System.out.println(a<b?a:b);
}
}
1 comment thread