rspec/rules/S3676/java/rule.adoc

44 lines
1.4 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

2021-04-28 16:49:39 +02:00
The ``++Class.isInstance++`` method is the dynamic equivalent of the ``++instanceof++`` operator. According to the JavaDoc, ``++isInstance++``
____
returns ``++true++`` if the specified Object argument is an instance of the represented class (or of any of its subclasses); it returns ``++false++`` otherwise
____
Thus, calling ``++isInstance++`` with a class argument is likely a mistake, since any random ``++Class++`` will only be "an instance of the represented class" when the left-hand side of the call is ``++Class.class++`` itself. To test for a class/sub-class relationship, use ``++isAssignableFrom++`` instead.
2021-04-28 16:49:39 +02:00
== Noncompliant Code Example
----
Class<Number> num = Number.class;
Class<BigInteger> bi = BigInteger.class;
System.out.println(num.isInstance(bi)); // Noncompliant. false
System.out.println(bi.isInstance(Class.class)); // Noncompliant. false
System.out.println(Class.class.isInstance(bi)); // Noncompliant. true
----
2021-04-28 16:49:39 +02:00
== Compliant Solution
----
Class<Number> num = Number.class;
Class<BigInteger> bi = BigInteger.class;
System.out.println(num.isAssignableFrom(bi)); // true
System.out.println(bi.isAssignableFrom(Class.class)); // false
System.out.println(Class.class.isAssignableFrom(bi)); // false
----
ifdef::env-github,rspecator-view[]
'''
== Comments And Links
(visible only on this page)
include::comments-and-links.adoc[]
endif::env-github,rspecator-view[]