T - the type of instance that can be contained.
Optional is naturally covariant on this type, so it is safe to cast an
Optional<T> to
Optional<S> for any supertype
S of
T.
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public abstract class Optional<T> extends Objectimplements Serializable
null".
A non-null Optional<T> reference can be used as a replacement for a nullable T reference. It allows you to represent "a T that must be present" and a "a T that might be absent" as two distinct types in your program, which can aid clarity.
Some uses of this class include
null to indicate that no value was available Optional.absent()) null (though there are several other approaches to this that should be considered first) A common alternative to using this class is to find or create a suitable null object for the type in question.
This class is not intended as a direct analogue of any existing "option" or "maybe" construct from other programming environments, though it may bear some similarities.
Comparison to java.util.Optional (JDK 8 and higher): A new Optional class was added for Java 8. The two classes are extremely similar, but incompatible (they cannot share a common supertype). All known differences are listed either here or with the relevant methods below.
java.util.Optional is not. java.util.Optional has the additional methods ifPresent, filter, flatMap, and orElseThrow. java.util offers the primitive-specialized versions OptionalInt, OptionalLong and OptionalDouble, the use of which is recommended; Guava does not have these. There are no plans to deprecate this class in the foreseeable future. However, we do gently recommend that you prefer the new, standard Java class whenever possible.
See the Guava User Guide article on using Optional.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
static <T> Optional |
absent()
Returns an
Optional instance with no contained reference.
|
abstract Set |
asSet()
|
abstract boolean |
equals(Object
Returns
true if
object is an
Optional instance, and either the contained references are
equal to each other or both are absent.
|
static <T> Optional |
fromNullable(T nullableReference)
If
nullableReference is non-null, returns an
Optional instance containing that reference; otherwise returns
absent().
|
abstract T |
get()
Returns the contained instance, which must be present.
|
abstract int |
hashCode()
Returns a hash code for this instance.
|
abstract boolean |
isPresent()
Returns
true if this holder contains a (non-null) instance.
|
static <T> Optional |
of(T reference)
Returns an
Optional instance containing the given non-null reference.
|
abstract Optional |
or(Optional
Returns this
Optional if it has a value present;
secondChoice otherwise.
|
abstract T |
or(Supplier
Returns the contained instance if it is present;
supplier.get() otherwise.
|
abstract T |
or(T defaultValue)
Returns the contained instance if it is present;
defaultValue otherwise.
|
abstract T |
orNull()
Returns the contained instance if it is present;
null otherwise.
|
static <T> Iterable |
presentInstances(Iterable
Returns the value of each present instance from the supplied
optionals, in order, skipping over occurrences of
absent().
|
abstract String |
toString()
Returns a string representation for this instance.
|
abstract <V> Optional |
transform(Function
|
public static <T> Optional<T> absent()
Optional instance with no contained reference.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is equivalent to Java 8's Optional.empty.
public static <T> Optional<T> of(T reference)
Optional instance containing the given non-null reference. To have
null treated as
absent(), use
fromNullable(T) instead.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: no differences.
NullPointerException - if
reference is null
public static <T> Optional<T> fromNullable(T nullableReference)
nullableReference is non-null, returns an
Optional instance containing that reference; otherwise returns
absent().
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is equivalent to Java 8's Optional.ofNullable.
public abstract boolean isPresent()
true if this holder contains a (non-null) instance.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: no differences.
public abstract T get()
or(Object) or
orNull() instead.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: when the value is absent, this method throws IllegalStateException, whereas the Java 8 counterpart throws NoSuchElementException.
IllegalStateException - if the instance is absent (
isPresent() returns
false); depending on this
specific exception type (over the more general
RuntimeException) is discouraged
public abstract T or(T defaultValue)
defaultValue otherwise. If no default value should be required because the instance is known to be present, use
get() instead. For a default value of
null, use
orNull().
Note about generics: The signature public T or(T defaultValue) is overly restrictive. However, the ideal signature, public <S super T> S or(S), is not legal Java. As a result, some sensible operations involving subtypes are compile errors:
Optional<Integer> optionalInt = getSomeOptionalInt(); Number value = optionalInt.or(0.5); // error FluentIterable<? extends Number> numbers = getSomeNumbers(); Optional<? extends Number> first = numbers.first(); Number value = first.or(0.5); // error
As a workaround, it is always safe to cast an Optional<? extends T> to Optional<T>. Casting either of the above example Optional instances to Optional<Number> (where Number is the desired output type) solves the problem:
Optional<Number> optionalInt = (Optional) getSomeOptionalInt(); Number value = optionalInt.or(0.5); // fine FluentIterable<? extends Number> numbers = getSomeNumbers(); Optional<Number> first = (Optional) numbers.first(); Number value = first.or(0.5); // fine
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is similar to Java 8's Optional.orElse, but will not accept null as a defaultValue (orNull() must be used instead). As a result, the value returned by this method is guaranteed non-null, which is not the case for the java.util equivalent.
public abstract Optional<T> or(Optional <? extends T> secondChoice)
Optional if it has a value present;
secondChoice otherwise.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method has no equivalent in Java 8's Optional class; write thisOptional.isPresent() ? thisOptional : secondChoice instead.
@Beta public abstract T or(Supplier<? extends T> supplier)
supplier.get() otherwise.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is similar to Java 8's Optional.orElseGet, except when supplier returns null. In this case this method throws an exception, whereas the Java 8 method returns the null to the caller.
NullPointerException - if this optional's value is absent and the supplier returns
null
public abstract T orNull()
null otherwise. If the instance is known to be present, use
get() instead.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is equivalent to Java 8's Optional.orElse(null).
public abstract Set<T> asSet()
Set whose only element is the contained instance if it is present; an empty immutable
Set otherwise.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method has no equivalent in Java 8's Optional class. However, this common usage:
for (Foo foo : possibleFoo.asSet()) { doSomethingWith(foo); } ... can be replaced with:
possibleFoo.ifPresent(foo -> doSomethingWith(foo));
public abstract <V> Optional<V> transform(Function <? super T ,V> function)
Function; otherwise,
absent() is returned.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method is similar to Java 8's Optional.map, except when function returns null. In this case this method throws an exception, whereas the Java 8 method returns Optional.absent().
NullPointerException - if the function returns
null
public abstract boolean equals(Objectobject)
true if
object is an
Optional instance, and either the contained references are
equal to each other or both are absent. Note that
Optional instances of differing parameterized types can be equal.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: no differences.
public abstract int hashCode()
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this class leaves the specific choice of hash code unspecified, unlike the Java 8 equivalent.
public abstract StringtoString()
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this class leaves the specific string representation unspecified, unlike the Java 8 equivalent.
@Beta public static <T> Iterable<T> presentInstances(Iterable <? extends Optional <? extends T>> optionals)
optionals, in order, skipping over occurrences of
absent(). Iterators are unmodifiable and are evaluated lazily.
Comparison to java.util.Optional: this method has no equivalent in Java 8's Optional class; use optionals.stream().filter(Optional::isPresent).map(Optional::get) instead.