For testing purposes, I often start typing some code in an already existing project. So, my code I want to test comes before all the other code, like this:
public static void main(String[] args)
{
char a = '%';
System.out.println((int)a);
// To know where '%' is located in the ASCII table.
// But, of course, I don't want to start the whole project, so:
return;
// The real project starts here...
}
But the compiler complains about the return
-statement, because of the following "dead code". (While in C++ the compiler obeys the programmer and simply compiles the return statement)
To prevent the compiler complains, I write a stupid if
-statement:
if (0 != 1) return;
I hate it. Why can't the compiler do what I ask? Are there some compilation flags or annotations or whatever to solve my problem?
There are no flags to turn of this behaviour. The rules that make dead code a compile time error are part of the JLS (§14.21 Unreachable Statements) and can't be turned off.
There's an explicit loophole in the loop which allows code like this:
if (true) return;
someOtherCode(); // this code will never execute, but the compiler will still allow it
This is done explicitly to allow "commenting-out" or conditional compilation (depending on some static final boolean
flag).
In case you're curious: the loophole is based on the fact that a known-constant value of the condition expression of an if
statement is not considered when checking reachability of code within or after the if
statement. A similar situation occurs with while
, where known-constant values are considered, so this code will not compile:
while (true) return;
someOtherCode(); // this will be flagged as an unreachable statement