Of course, people will do what they want. But we did have a clear intention when adding this feature, and it was not to be a general purpose Maybe type, as much as many people would have liked us to do so. Our intention was to provide a limited mechanism for library method return types where there needed to be a clear way to represent "no result", and using null
for such was overwhelmingly likely to cause errors.
For example, you probably should never use it for something that returns an array of results, or a list of results; instead return an empty array or list. You should almost never use it as a field of something or a method parameter.
I think routinely using it as a return value for getters would definitely be over-use.
There's nothing wrong with Optional that it should be avoided, it's just not what many people wish it were, and accordingly we were fairly concerned about the risk of zealous over-use.
(Public service announcement: NEVER call Optional.get
unless you can prove it will never be null; instead use one of the safe methods like orElse
or ifPresent
. In retrospect, we should have called get
something like getOrElseThrowNoSuchElementException
or something that made it far clearer that this was a highly dangerous method that undermined the whole purpose of Optional
in the first place. Lesson learned. (UPDATE: Java 10 has Optional.orElseThrow()
, which is semantically equivalent to get()
, but whose name is more appropriate.))
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