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The conditional operator ?: uses the boolean value of its first operand to decide which of the other two expressions will be evaluated. (See §15.25, "Conditional Operator ? :" of the Java Language Specification [JLS 2011].)

The general form of a Java conditional expression is operand1 ? operand2 : operand3.

  • If the value of the first operand (operand1) is true, then the second operand expression (operand2) is chosen.
  • If the value of the first operand is false, then the third operand expression (operand3) is chosen.

The conditional operator is syntactically right-associative. For example, a?b:c?d:e?f:g is equivalent to a?b:(c?d:(e?f:g)).

The Java Language Specification rules for determining the result type of a conditional expression (see following table) are complicated; programmers could be surprised by the type conversions required for expressions they have written.

Result type determination begins from the top of the table; the compiler applies the first matching rule. The Operand 2 and Operand 3 columns refer to operand2 and operand3 (from the previous definition) respectively. In the table, constant int refers to constant expressions of type int (such as '0' or variables declared final).

Rule

Operand 2

Operand 3

Resultant type

1

type T

type T

type T

2

boolean

Boolean

boolean

3

Boolean

boolean

boolean

4

null

reference

reference

5

reference

null

reference

6

byte or Byte

short or Short

short

7

short or Short

byte or Byte

short

8

byte, short, char, Byte, Short, Character

constant int

byte, short, char if value of int is representable

9

constant int

byte, short, char, Byte, Short, Character

byte, short, char if value of int is representable

10

other numeric

other numeric

promoted type of the 2nd and 3rd operands

11

T1 = boxing conversion(S1)

T2 = boxing conversion(S2)

apply capture conversion to lub(T1,T2)

See §5.1.7, "Boxing Conversion", §5.1.10, "Capture Conversion" and §15.12.2.7, "Inferring Type Arguments Based on Actual Arguments" of the Java Language Specification for additional information on the final table entry.

The complexity of the rules that determine the result type of a conditional expression can lead to unintended type conversions. Consequently, the second and third operands of each conditional expression should have identical types. This recommendation also applies to boxed primitives.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant code example, the programmer expects that both print statements will print the value of alpha as a charA. The first print statement prints A because the compiler applies the eighth rule from the result type determination table to determine that the second and third operands of the conditional expression are, or are converted to, type char. However, the second print statement prints 65 — the value of alpha as an int. The first matching rule from the table is the tenth rule. Consequently, the compiler promotes the value of alpha to type int.

public class Expr {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    char alpha = 'A';
    int i = 0;
    /* other code. Value of i may change */
    boolean trueExp = ...; // some expression that evaluates to true
    System.out.print(trueExp ? alpha : 0); // prints A
    System.out.print(trueExp ? alpha : i); // prints 65
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution uses identical types for the second and third operands of each conditional expression; the explicit casts specify the type expected by the programmer.

public class Expr {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    char alpha = 'A';
    int i = 0;
    boolean trueExp = ...; // some expression that evaluates to true
    System.out.print(trueExp ? alpha : ((char) 0)); // prints A
    // Deliberate narrowing cast of i; possible truncation OK
    System.out.print(trueExp ? alpha : ((char) i)); // prints A
  }
}

Note that the explicit cast in the first conditional expression is redundant; that is, the value printed remains identical whether the cast is present or absent. Nevertheless, use of the redundant cast is good practice; it serves as an explicit indication of the programmer's intent and consequently improves maintainability. When the value of i in the second conditional expression falls outside the range that can be represented as a char, the explicit cast will truncate its value. This usage complies with exception NUM12-EX0 of NUM12-J. Ensure conversions of numeric types to narrower types do not result in lost or misinterpreted data.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example prints 100 as the size of the HashSet rather than the expected result (some value between 0 and 50). The combination of values of types short and int in the second argument of the conditional expression (the operation i-1) causes the result to be an int, as specified by the normal integer promotion rules. Consequently, the Short object in the third argument is autounboxed into a short, which is then promoted into an int. The result of the conditional expression is then autoboxed into an object of type Integer. Because the HashSet contains only values of type Short, the call to HashSet.remove() has no effect.

public class ShortSet {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    HashSet<Short> s = new HashSet<Short>();
    for (short i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
      s.add(i);
      // Cast of i-1 is safe, because value is always representable
      Short workingVal = (short) (i-1);
      ... // other code may update workingVal

      s.remove(((i % 2) == 1) ? i-1 : workingVal);
    }
    System.out.println(s.size());
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution casts the second operand to type short, then explicitly invokes the Short.valueOf() method to create a Short instance whose value is i - 1. Consequently, the second and third operands of the conditional expression both have type Short, and the remove() call has the expected result.

public class ShortSet {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    HashSet<Short> s = new HashSet<Short>();
    for (short i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
      s.add(i);
      // Cast of i-1 is safe, because value is always representable
      Short workingVal = (short) (i-1);
      ... // other code may update workingVal

      // Cast of i-1 is safe, because value is always representable
      s.remove(((i % 2) == 1) ? Short.valueOf((short) (i-1)) : workingVal);
    }
    System.out.println(s.size());
  }
}

Writing the conditional expression as ((i % 2) == 1) ? (short) (i-1)) : workingVal also complies with this guideline because both the second and third operands in this form have type short. However, this alternative is less efficient because it forces unboxing of workingVal on each even iteration of the loop and autoboxing of the result of the conditional expression (from short to Short) on every iteration of the loop.

Applicability

When the second and third operands of a conditional expression have different types, they can be subject to unexpected type conversions.

Automated detection of condition expressions whose second and third operands are of different types is straightforward.

Bibliography

[Bloch 2005]

Puzzle 8: Dos Equis

[Findbugs 2008]

"Bx: Primitive value is unboxed and coerced for ternary operator"

[JLS 2011]

§15.25, "Conditional Operator ? :"

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