JEP 427: Pattern Matching for switch (Third Preview)

OwnerGavin Bierman
TypeFeature
ScopeSE
StatusClosed / Delivered
Release19
Componentspecification / language
Discussionamber dash dev at openjdk dot java dot net
Relates toJEP 406: Pattern Matching for switch (Preview)
JEP 420: Pattern Matching for switch (Second Preview)
JEP 405: Record Patterns (Preview)
JEP 433: Pattern Matching for switch (Fourth Preview)
Reviewed byBrian Goetz
Endorsed byBrian Goetz
Created2022/02/22 18:01
Updated2023/05/12 15:34
Issue8282272

Summary

Enhance the Java programming language with pattern matching for switch expressions and statements. Extending pattern matching to switch allows an expression to be tested against a number of patterns, each with a specific action, so that complex data-oriented queries can be expressed concisely and safely. This is a preview language feature.

History

Pattern Matching for switch was proposed as a preview feature by JEP 406 and delivered in JDK 17, and proposed for a second preview by JEP 420 and delivered in JDK 18. This JEP proposes a third preview with further refinements based upon continued experience and feedback.

The main changes since the second preview are:

Goals

Motivation

In Java 16, JEP 394 extended the instanceof operator to take a type pattern and perform pattern matching. This modest extension allows the familiar instanceof-and-cast idiom to be simplified:

// Old code
if (o instanceof String) {
    String s = (String)o;
    ... use s ...
}

// New code
if (o instanceof String s) {
    ... use s ...
}

We often want to compare a variable such as o against multiple alternatives. Java supports multi-way comparisons with switch statements and, since Java 14, switch expressions (JEP 361), but unfortunately switch is very limited. You can only switch on values of a few types — integral primitive types (excluding long), their corresponding boxed forms, enum types, and String — and you can only test for exact equality against constants. We might like to use patterns to test the same variable against a number of possibilities, taking a specific action on each, but since the existing switch does not support that we end up with a chain of if...else tests such as:

static String formatter(Object o) {
    String formatted = "unknown";
    if (o instanceof Integer i) {
        formatted = String.format("int %d", i);
    } else if (o instanceof Long l) {
        formatted = String.format("long %d", l);
    } else if (o instanceof Double d) {
        formatted = String.format("double %f", d);
    } else if (o instanceof String s) {
        formatted = String.format("String %s", s);
    }
    return formatted;
}

This code benefits from using pattern instanceof expressions, but it is far from perfect. First and foremost, this approach allows coding errors to remain hidden because we have used an overly general control construct. The intent is to assign something to formatted in each arm of the if...else chain, but there is nothing that enables the compiler to identify and verify this invariant. If some block — perhaps one that is executed rarely — does not assign to formatted, we have a bug. (Declaring formatted as a blank local would at least enlist the compiler’s definite-assignment analysis in this effort, but developers do not always write such declarations.) In addition, the above code is not optimizable; absent compiler heroics it will have O(n) time complexity, even though the underlying problem is often O(1).

But switch is a perfect match for pattern matching! If we extend switch statements and expressions to work on any type, and allow case labels with patterns rather than just constants, then we can rewrite the above code more clearly and reliably:

static String formatterPatternSwitch(Object o) {
    return switch (o) {
        case Integer i -> String.format("int %d", i);
        case Long l    -> String.format("long %d", l);
        case Double d  -> String.format("double %f", d);
        case String s  -> String.format("String %s", s);
        default        -> o.toString();
    };
}

The semantics of this switch are clear: A case label with a pattern applies if the value of the selector expression o matches the pattern. (We have shown a switch expression for brevity but could instead have shown a switch statement; the switch block, including the case labels, would be unchanged.)

The intent of this code is clearer because we are using the right control construct: We are saying, "the parameter o matches at most one of the following conditions, figure it out and evaluate the corresponding arm." As a bonus, it is optimizable; in this case we are more likely to be able to perform the dispatch in O(1) time.

Pattern switches and null

Traditionally, switch statements and expressions throw NullPointerException if the selector expression evaluates to null, so testing for null must be done outside of the switch:

static void testFooBar(String s) {
    if (s == null) {
        System.out.println("Oops!");
        return;
    }
    switch (s) {
        case "Foo", "Bar" -> System.out.println("Great");
        default           -> System.out.println("Ok");
    }
}

This was reasonable when switch supported only a few reference types. However, if switch allows a selector expression of any type, and case labels can have type patterns, then the standalone null test feels like an arbitrary distinction, and invites needless boilerplate and opportunity for error. It would be better to integrate the null test into the switch by allowing a new null case label:

static void testFooBar(String s) {
    switch (s) {
        case null         -> System.out.println("Oops");
        case "Foo", "Bar" -> System.out.println("Great");
        default           -> System.out.println("Ok");
    }
}

The behavior of the switch when the value of the selector expression is null is always determined by its case labels. With a case null, the switch executes the code associated with that label; without a case null, the switch throws NullPointerException, just as before. (To maintain backward compatibility with the current semantics of switch, the default label does not match a null selector.)

We may wish to combine null with another case label. For example, in the following code, the label case null, String s matches both the null value and all String values:

static void testStringOrNull(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case null, String s -> System.out.println("String: " + s);
        default -> System.out.println("Something else");
    }
}

Case refinement

Experimentation with patterns in switch suggests it is common to want to refine the test embodied by a pattern label. For example, consider the following code that switches over a Shape value:

class Shape {}
class Rectangle extends Shape {}
class Triangle  extends Shape { int calculateArea() { ... } }

static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
    switch (s) {
        case null:
            break;
        case Triangle t:
            if (t.calculateArea() > 100) {
                System.out.println("Large triangle");
                break;
            }
        default:
            System.out.println("A shape, possibly a small triangle");
    }
}

The intent of this code is to have a special case for large triangles (those whose area is over 100), and a default case for everything else (including small triangles). However, we cannot express this directly with a single pattern. We first have to write a case label that matches all triangles, and then place the test of the area of the triangle rather uncomfortably within the corresponding statement group. Then we have to use fall-through to get the correct behavior when the triangle has an area less than 100. (Note the careful placement of the break statement inside the if block.)

The problem here is that using a single pattern to discriminate among cases does not scale beyond a single condition — we need some way to express a refinement to a pattern. One approach is to introduce guarded patterns, written p && b, that allow a pattern p to be refined by an arbitrary boolean expression b.

We implemented guarded patterns in the predecessors of this JEP. Based upon experience and feedback we propose instead to allow when clauses in switch blocks to specify guards to pattern labels, e.g., case Triangle t when t.calculateArea() > 100. We refer to such a pattern label as a guarded pattern label, and to the boolean expression as the guard.

With this approach, we can revisit the testTriangle code to express the special case for large triangles directly. This eliminates the use of fall-through in the switch statement, which in turn means we can enjoy concise arrow-style (->) rules:

static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
    switch (s) {
        case null -> 
            { break; }
        case Triangle t
        when t.calculateArea() > 100 ->
            System.out.println("Large triangle");
        default ->
            System.out.println("A shape, possibly a small triangle");
    }
}

The first clause is taken if the value of s matches the pattern Triangle t and subsequently the guard t.calculateArea() > 100 evaluates to true. (The guard is able to use any pattern variables that are declared by the pattern in the case label.)

Using switch makes it easy to understand and change case labels when application requirements change. For example, we might want to split triangles out of the default path; we can do that by using two case clauses, one with a guard and one without:

static void testTriangle(Shape s) {
    switch (s) {
        case null -> 
            { break; }
        case Triangle t
        when t.calculateArea() > 100 ->
            System.out.println("Large triangle");
        case Triangle t ->
            System.out.println("Small triangle");
        default ->
            System.out.println("Non-triangle");
    }
}

Description

We enhance switch statements and expressions in three ways:

For convenience, we also introduce parenthesized patterns.

Patterns in switch labels

The main enhancement is to introduce a new case p switch label, where p is a pattern. The essence of switch is unchanged: The value of the selector expression is compared to the switch labels, one of the labels is selected, and the code associated with that label is executed or evaluated. The difference now is that for case labels with patterns, the label selected is determined by the result of pattern matching rather than by an equality test. For example, in the following code, the value of o matches the pattern Long l, and the expression associated with the label case Long l is evaluated:

Object o = 123L;
String formatted = switch (o) {
    case Integer i -> String.format("int %d", i);
    case Long l    -> String.format("long %d", l);
    case Double d  -> String.format("double %f", d);
    case String s  -> String.format("String %s", s);
    default        -> o.toString();
};

After a successful pattern match we often further test the result of the match. This can lead to cumbersome code, such as:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case String s:
            if (s.length() == 1) { ... }
            else { ... }
            break;
        ...
    }
}

The desired test — that o is a String of length 1 — is unfortunately split between the pattern case label and the following if statement.

To address this we introduce guarded pattern labels by supporting an optional guard after the pattern label. This allows the above code to be rewritten so that all the conditional logic is lifted into the switch label:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case String s when s.length() == 1 -> ...
        case String s                      -> ...
        ...
    }
}

The first clause matches if o is both a String and of length 1. The second case matches if o is a String of any length.

Only pattern labels can have a guard. For example, it is not valid to write a label with a case constant and a guard, e.g. case "Hello" when RandomBooleanExpression().

Sometimes we need to parenthesize patterns to improve readability. We therefore extend the language of patterns to support parenthesized patterns written (p), where p is a pattern. A parenthesized pattern (p) introduces the pattern variables that are introduced by the subpattern p. A value matches a parenthesized pattern (p) if it matches the pattern p.

There are four major language design areas to consider when supporting patterns in switch:

  1. Enhanced type checking
  2. Exhaustiveness of switch expressions and statements
  3. Scope of pattern variable declarations
  4. Dealing with null

1. Enhanced type checking

1a. Selector expression typing

Supporting patterns in switch means that we can relax the current restrictions on the type of the selector expression. Currently the type of the selector expression of a normal switch must be either an integral primitive type (excluding long), the corresponding boxed form (i.e., Character, Byte, Short, or Integer), String, or an enum type. We extend this and require that the type of the selector expression be either an integral primitive type (excluding long) or any reference type.

For example, in the following pattern switch the selector expression o is matched with type patterns involving a class type, an enum type, a record type, and an array type, along with a null case label and a default:

record Point(int i, int j) {}
enum Color { RED, GREEN, BLUE; }

static void typeTester(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case null     -> System.out.println("null");
        case String s -> System.out.println("String");
        case Color c  -> System.out.println("Color: " + c.toString());
        case Point p  -> System.out.println("Record class: " + p.toString());
        case int[] ia -> System.out.println("Array of ints of length" + ia.length);
        default       -> System.out.println("Something else");
    }
}

Every case label in the switch block must be compatible with the selector expression. For a case label with a pattern, known as a pattern label, we use the existing notion of compatibility of an expression with a pattern (JLS §14.30.1).

1b. Dominance of pattern labels

Supporting pattern labels means that it is now possible for multiple labels to apply to the value of a selector expression (previously, all case labels were disjoint). For example, both the labels case String s and case CharSequence cs could apply to a value of type String.

The first issue to resolve is deciding exactly which label should apply in this circumstance. Rather than attempt a complicated best-fit approach, we adopt a simpler semantics: The first pattern label appearing in a switch block that applies to a value is chosen.

static void first(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case String s ->
            System.out.println("A string: " + s);
        case CharSequence cs ->
            System.out.println("A sequence of length " + cs.length());
        default -> {
            break;
        }
    }
}

In this example, if the value of o is of type String then the first pattern label will apply; if it is of type CharSequence but not of type String then the second pattern label will apply.

But what happens if we swap the order of these two pattern labels?

static void error(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case CharSequence cs ->
            System.out.println("A sequence of length " + cs.length());
        case String s ->    // Error - pattern is dominated by previous pattern
            System.out.println("A string: " + s);
        default -> {
            break;
        }
    }
}

Now if the value of o is of type String the CharSequence pattern label applies, since it appears first in the switch block. The String pattern label is unreachable in the sense that there is no value of the selector expression that would cause it to be chosen. By analogy to unreachable code, this is treated as a programmer error and results in a compile-time error.

More precisely, we say that the first pattern label case CharSequence cs dominates the second pattern label case String s because every value that matches the pattern String s also matches the pattern CharSequence cs, but not vice versa. This is because the type of the second pattern, String, is a subtype of the type of the first pattern, CharSequence.

An unguarded pattern label dominates a guarded pattern label that has the same pattern. For example, the (unguarded) pattern label case String s dominates the guarded pattern label case String s when s.length() > 0, since every value that matches the pattern label case String s when s.length() > 0 must match the pattern label case String s.

A guarded pattern label dominates another pattern label (guarded or unguarded) only when both the former's pattern dominates the latter's pattern and when its guard is a constant expression of value true. For example, the guarded pattern label case String s when true dominates the pattern label case String s. We do not analyze the guarding expression any further in order to determine more precisely which values match the pattern label (a problem which is undecidable in general).

A pattern label can dominate a constant label. For example, the pattern label case Integer i dominates the constant label case 42, and the pattern label case E e dominates the constant label case A when A is an enum constant of enum class type E. A guarded pattern label dominates a constant label if the same pattern label without the when clause does. In other words, we do not check the guard, since this is undecidable in general. For example, the pattern label case String s when s.length() > 1 dominates the constant label case "hello", as expected; but case Integer i when i != 0 dominates the label case 0.

All this suggests a simple, predictable, and readable ordering of case labels in which the constant labels should appear before the guarded pattern labels, and those should appear before the unguarded pattern labels:

Integer i = ...
switch (i) {
    case -1, 1 -> ...                 // Special cases
    case Integer i when i > 0 -> ...  // Positive integer cases
    case Integer i -> ...             // All the remaining integers
}

The compiler checks all labels. It is a compile-time error for a label in a switch block to be dominated by an earlier label in that switch block. This dominance requirement ensures that if a switch block contains only type pattern case labels, they will appear in subtype order.

(The notion of dominance is analogous to conditions on the catch clauses of a try statement, where it is an error if a catch clause that catches an exception class E is preceded by a catch clause that can catch E or a superclass of E (JLS §11.2.3). Logically, the preceding catch clause dominates the subsequent catch clause.)

It is also a compile-time error for a switch block of a switch expression or switch statement to have more than one match-all switch label. The match-all labels are default and pattern labels where the pattern unconditionally matches the selector expression. For example, the type pattern String s unconditionally matches a selector expression of type String, and the type pattern Object o unconditionally matches a selector expression of any reference type.

2. Exhaustiveness of switch expressions and statements

A switch expression requires that all possible values of the selector expression be handled in the switch block; in other words, it is exhaustive. This maintains the property that successful evaluation of a switch expression will always yield a value. For normal switch expressions, this is enforced by a fairly straightforward set of extra conditions on the switch block.

For pattern switch expressions and statements, we achieve this by defining a notion of type coverage of switch labels in a switch block. The type coverage of all the switch labels in the switch block is then combined to determine if the switch block exhausts all the possibilities of the selector expression.

Consider this (erroneous) pattern switch expression:

static int coverage(Object o) {
    return switch (o) {         // Error - not exhaustive
        case String s -> s.length();
    };
}

The switch block has only one switch label, case String s. This matches any value of the selector expression whose type is a subtype of String. We therefore say that the type coverage of this switch label is every subtype of String. This pattern switch expression is not exhaustive because the type coverage of its switch block (all subtypes of String) does not include the type of the selector expression (Object).

Consider this (still erroneous) example:

static int coverage(Object o) {
    return switch (o) {         // Error - still not exhaustive
        case String s  -> s.length();
        case Integer i -> i;
    };
}

The type coverage of this switch block is the union of the coverage of its two switch labels. In other words, the type coverage is the set of all subtypes of String and the set of all subtypes of Integer. But, again, the type coverage still does not include the type of the selector expression, so this pattern switch expression is also not exhaustive and causes a compile-time error.

The type coverage of a default label is all types, so this example is (at last!) legal:

static int coverage(Object o) {
    return switch (o) {
        case String s  -> s.length();
        case Integer i -> i;
        default -> 0;
    };
}

If the type of the selector expression is a sealed class (JEP 409), then the type coverage check can take into account the permits clause of the sealed class to determine whether a switch block is exhaustive. This can sometimes remove the need for a default clause. Consider the following example of a sealed interface S with three permitted subclasses A, B, and C:

sealed interface S permits A, B, C {}
final class A implements S {}
final class B implements S {}
record C(int i) implements S {}  // Implicitly final

static int testSealedExhaustive(S s) {
    return switch (s) {
        case A a -> 1;
        case B b -> 2;
        case C c -> 3;
    };
}

The compiler can determine that the type coverage of the switch block is the types A, B, and C. Since the type of the selector expression, S, is a sealed interface whose permitted subclasses are exactly A, B, and C, this switch block is exhaustive. As a result, no default label is needed.

Some extra care is needed when a permitted direct subclass only implements a specific parameterization of a (generic) sealed superclass. For example:

sealed interface I<T> permits A, B {}
final class A<X> implements I<String> {}
final class B<Y> implements I<Y> {}

static int testGenericSealedExhaustive(I<Integer> i) {
    return switch (i) {
        // Exhaustive as no A case possible!
        case B<Integer> bi -> 42;
    }
}

The only permitted subclasses of I are A and B, but the compiler can detect that the switch block need only cover the class B to be exhaustive since the selector expression is of type I<Integer>.

To defend against incompatible separate compilation, in this case of a switch over a sealed class where the switch block is exhaustive and there is no match-all case, the compiler automatically adds a default label whose code throws an IncompatibleClassChangeError. This label will only be reached if the sealed interface is changed and the switch code is not recompiled. In effect, the compiler hardens your code for you.

This condition of exhaustiveness applies to both pattern switch expressions and pattern switch statements. To ensure backward compatibility, all existing switch statements will compile unchanged. But if a switch statement uses any of the switch enhancements detailed in this JEP, then the compiler will check that it is exhaustive. (Future compilers of the Java language may emit warnings for legacy switch statements that are not exhaustive.)

More precisely, exhaustiveness is required of any switch statement that uses pattern or null labels or whose selector expression is not one of the legacy types (char, byte, short, int, Character, Byte, Short, Integer, String, or an enum type). For example:

sealed interface S permits A, B, C {}
final class A implements S {}
final class B implements S {}
record C(int i) implements S {}  // Implicitly final

static void switchStatementExhaustive(S s) {
    switch (s) {    // Error - not exhaustive;
                    // missing clause for permitted class B!
        case A a :
            System.out.println("A");
            break;
        case C c :
            System.out.println("C");
            break;
    };
}

Making most switches exhaustive is just a matter of adding a simple default clause at the end of the switch block. This leads to clearer and easier to verify code. For example, the following pattern switch statement is not exhaustive and is erroneous:

Object o = ...
switch (o) {    // Error - not exhaustive!
    case String s:
        System.out.println(s);
        break;
    case Integer i:
        System.out.println("Integer");
        break;
}

It can be made exhaustive trivially:

Object o = ...
switch (o) {
    case String s:
        System.out.println(s);
        break;
    case Integer i:
        System.out.println("Integer");
        break;
    default:    // Now exhaustive!
        break;
}

The notion of exhaustiveness is made more complicated by record patterns (JEP 405) since these patterns support the nesting of other patterns inside them. Accordingly, the notion of exhaustiveness has to reflect this potentially recursive structure.

3. Scope of pattern variable declarations

Pattern variables (JEP 394) are local variables that are declared by patterns. Pattern variable declarations are unusual in that their scope is flow-sensitive. As a recap consider the following example, where the type pattern String s declares the pattern variable s:

static void test(Object o) {
    if ((o instanceof String s) && s.length() > 3) {
        System.out.println(s);
    } else {
        System.out.println("Not a string");
    }
}

The declaration of s is in scope in the right-hand operand of the && expression, as well as in the "then" block. However, it is not in scope in the "else" block; in order for control to transfer to the "else" block the pattern match must fail, in which case the pattern variable will not have been initialized.

We extend this flow-sensitive notion of scope for pattern variable declarations to encompass pattern declarations occurring in case labels with three new rules:

  1. The scope of a pattern variable declaration which occurs in a switch label includes any when clause of that label.

  2. The scope of a pattern variable declaration which occurs in a case label of a switch rule includes the expression, block, or throw statement that appears to the right of the arrow.

  3. The scope of a pattern variable declaration which occurs in a case label of a switch labeled statement group includes the block statements of the statement group. Falling through a case label that declares a pattern variable is forbidden.

This example shows the first rule in action:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case Character c
        when c.charValue() == 7:
            System.out.println("Ding!");
            break;
        default:
            break;
        }
    }
}

The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable c includes the when expression of the switch label.

This variant shows the second rule in action:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case Character c -> {
            if (c.charValue() == 7) {
                System.out.println("Ding!");
            }
            System.out.println("Character");
        }
        case Integer i ->
            throw new IllegalStateException("Invalid Integer argument: "
                                            + i.intValue());
        default -> {
            break;
        }
    }
}

Here the scope of the declaration of the pattern variable c is the block to the right of the first arrow. The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable i is the throw statement to the right of the second arrow.

The third rule is more complicated. Let us first consider an example where there is only one case label for a switch labeled statement group:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case Character c:
            if (c.charValue() == 7) {
                System.out.print("Ding ");
            }
            if (c.charValue() == 9) {
                System.out.print("Tab ");
            }
            System.out.println("Character");
        default:
            System.out.println();
    }
}

The scope of the declaration of the pattern variable c includes all the statements of the statement group, namely the two if statements and the println statement. The scope does not include the statements of the default statement group, even though the execution of the first statement group can fall through the default switch label and execute these statements.

We forbid the possibility of falling through a case label that declares a pattern variable. Consider this erroneous example:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case Character c:
            if (c.charValue() == 7) {
                System.out.print("Ding ");
            }
            if (c.charValue() == 9) {
                System.out.print("Tab ");
            }
            System.out.println("character");
        case Integer i:                 // Compile-time error
            System.out.println("An integer " + i);
        default:
            break;
    }
}

If this were allowed and the value of the selector expression o were a Character, then execution of the switch block could fall through the second statement group (after case Integer i:) where the pattern variable i would not have been initialized. Allowing execution to fall through a case label that declares a pattern variable is therefore a compile-time error.

This is why a switch label consisting of multiple pattern labels, e.g. case Character c: case Integer i: ..., is not permitted. Similar reasoning applies to the prohibition of multiple patterns within a single case label: Neither case Character c, Integer i: ... nor case Character c, Integer i -> ... is allowed. If such case labels were allowed then both c and i would be in scope after the colon or arrow, yet only one of them would have been initialized depending on whether the value of o was a Character or an Integer.

On the other hand, falling through a label that does not declare a pattern variable is safe, as this example shows:

void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case String s:
            System.out.println("A string");
        default:
            System.out.println("Done");
    }
}

4. Dealing with null

4a. Matching null

Traditionally, a switch throws NullPointerException if the selector expression evaluates to null. This is well-understood behavior and we do not propose to change it for any existing switch code.

However, given that there is a reasonable and non-exception-bearing semantics for pattern matching and null values, we have an opportunity to make pattern switch more null-friendly while remaining compatible with existing switch semantics.

First, we introduce a new null label for a case. We then lift the blanket rule that a switch immediately throws NullPointerException if the value of the selector expression is null. Instead, we inspect the case labels to determine the behavior of a switch:

For example, given the declaration below, evaluating test(null) will print null! rather than throw NullPointerException:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case null     -> System.out.println("null!");
        case String s -> System.out.println("String");
        default       -> System.out.println("Something else");
    }
}

This new behavior around null is as if the compiler automatically enriches the switch block with a case null whose body throws NullPointerException. In other words, this code:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case String s  -> System.out.println("String: " + s);
        case Integer i -> System.out.println("Integer");
        default        -> System.out.println("default");
    }
}

is equivalent to:

static void test(Object o) {
    switch (o) {
        case null      -> throw new NullPointerException();
        case String s  -> System.out.println("String: "+s);
        case Integer i -> System.out.println("Integer");
        default        -> System.out.println("default");
    }
}

In both examples, evaluating test(null) will cause NullPointerException to be thrown.

We preserve the intuition from the existing switch construct that performing a switch over null is an exceptional thing to do. The difference in a pattern switch is that you have a mechanism to directly handle this case inside the switch rather than outside. If you see a null label in a switch block, then this label will match a null value. If you do not see a null label in a switch block, then switching over a null value will throw NullPointerException, as before.

4b. New label forms arising from null labels

As of Java 16, switch blocks support two styles: one based on labeled groups of statements (the : form) where fall-through is possible, and one based on single-consequent form (the -> form) where fall-through is not possible. In the former style, multiple labels are typically written case l1: case l2: whereas in the latter style, multiple labels are written case l1, l2 ->.

Supporting null labels means that a number of special cases can be expressed in the : form. For example:

Object o = ...
switch (o) {
    case null: case String s:
        System.out.println("String, including null");
        break;
    ...
}

Developers reasonably expect the : and -> forms to be equally expressive, and that if case A: case B: is supported in the former style, then case A, B -> should be supported in the latter style. Consequently, the previous example suggests that we should support a case null, String s -> label, as follows:

Object o = ...
switch (o) {
    case null, String s -> System.out.println("String, including null");
    ...
}

The value of o matches this label when either it is the null reference, or it is a String. In both cases, the pattern variable s is initialized with the value of o. (The reverse form, case String s, null is also allowed, and behaves identically.)

It is also meaningful, and not uncommon, to combine a null case with a default label, i.e.,

Object o = ...
switch (o) {
    ...
    case null: default:
        System.out.println("The rest (including null)");
}

Again, this should be supported in the -> form. To do so we introduce a new default case label:

Object o = ...
switch (o) {
    ...
    case null, default ->
        System.out.println("The rest (including null)");
}

The value of o matches this label if either it is the null reference value, or no other labels match.

Future work

Alternatives

Dependencies

This JEP builds on pattern matching for instanceof (JEP 394) and also the enhancements offered by switch expressions (JEP 361). When JEP 405 (Record Patterns) appears, the resulting implementation will likely make use of dynamic constants (JEP 309).