This is a bug. Here's the specified behavior for a switch
statement according to the Java Language Specification, 3rd Edition:
SwitchStatement:
switch ( Expression ) SwitchBlock
When the switch
statement is executed, first the Expression
is evaluated. If the Expression
evaluates to null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown and the entire switch
statement completes abruptly for that reason.
Apparently the bug in Eclipse has nothing to do with default
case or enum
at all.
public class SwitchingOnAnull {
public static void main(String[] args) {
java.math.RoundingMode x = null;
switch(x) {};
switch((Integer) null) {};
switch((Character) null) {
default: System.out.println("I've got sunshine!");
}
}
}
The above code compiles and runs "fine" on (at least some version of) Eclipse. Each individual switch
throws a NullPointerException
when compiled with javac
, which is exactly as the specification mandates.
The cause
Here's javap -c SwitchingOnAnull
when compiled under Eclipse:
Compiled from "SwitchingOnAnull.java"
public class SwitchingOnAnull extends java.lang.Object{
public SwitchingOnAnull();
Code:
0: aload_0
1: invokespecial #8; //Method java/lang/Object."<init>":()V
4: return
public static void main(java.lang.String[]);
Code:
0: aconst_null
1: astore_1
2: getstatic #16; //Field java/lang/System.out:Ljava/io/PrintStream;
5: ldc #22; //String I've got sunshine!
7: invokevirtual #24; //Method java/io/PrintStream.println:(Ljava/lang/String;)V
10: return
}
It seems that the Eclipse compiler gets rid of the entire switch
constructs entirely. Unfortunately this optimization breaks the language specification.
The official words
The bug has been filed and assigned for fix.
Olivier Thomann 2010-05-28 08:37:21 EDT
We are too aggressive on the optimization.
For:
switch((Integer) null) {};
we optimize out the whole switch
statement when we should at least evaluate the
expression.
I'll take a look.
Candidate for 3.6.1.
See also