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* accompanied this code).
*
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/**
* Provides interfaces for creating tools, such as a Read-Eval-Print Loop (REPL),
* which interactively evaluate "snippets" of Java programming language code.
* Where a "snippet" is a single expression, statement, or declaration.
* This functionality can be used to enhance tools such as IDEs or can be
* stand-alone.
* <p>
* {@link jdk.jshell.JShell} is the central class. An instance of
* <code>JShell</code> holds the evaluation state, which is both the current
* set of source snippets and the execution state they have produced.
* <p>
* Each source snippet is represented by an instance of a subclass of
* {@link jdk.jshell.Snippet}. For example, a statement is represented by an
* instance of {@link jdk.jshell.StatementSnippet}, and a method declaration is
* represented by an instance of {@link jdk.jshell.MethodSnippet}.
* Snippets are created when
* {@link jdk.jshell.JShell#eval(java.lang.String) JShell.eval(String)}
* is invoked with an input which includes one or more snippets of code.
* <p>
* Any change to the compilation status of a snippet is reported with a
* {@link jdk.jshell.SnippetEvent}. There are three major kinds of
* changes to the status of a snippet: it can created with <code>eval</code>,
* it can be dropped from the active source state with
* {@link jdk.jshell.JShell#drop(jdk.jshell.Snippet)}, and it can have
* its status updated as a result of a status change in another snippet.
* For
* example: given <code>js</code>, an instance of <code>JShell</code>, executing
* <code>js.eval("int x = 5;")</code> will add the variable <code>x</code> to
* the source state and will generate an event describing the creation of a
* {@link jdk.jshell.VarSnippet} for <code>x</code>. Then executing
* <code>js.eval("int timesx(int val) { return val * x; }")</code> will add
* a method to the source state and will generate an event
* describing the creation of a {@link jdk.jshell.MethodSnippet} for
* <code>timesx</code>.
* Assume that <code>varx</code> holds the snippet created by the first
* call to <code>eval</code>, executing <code>js.drop(varx)</code> will
* generate two events: one for changing the status of the
* variable snippet to <code>DROPPED</code> and one for
* updating the method snippet (which now has an unresolved reference to
* <code>x</code>).
* <p>
* Of course, for any general application of the API, the input would not be
* fixed strings, but would come from the user. Below is a very simplified
* example of how the API might be used to implement a REPL.
* <pre>
* {@code
* import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
* import java.io.Console;
* import java.util.List;
* import jdk.jshell.*;
* import jdk.jshell.Snippet.Status;
*
* class ExampleJShell {
* public static void main(String[] args) {
* Console console = System.console();
* try (JShell js = JShell.create()) {
* do {
* System.out.print("Enter some Java code: ");
* String input = console.readLine();
* if (input == null) {
* break;
* }
* List<SnippetEvent> events = js.eval(input);
* for (SnippetEvent e : events) {
* StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
* if (e.causeSnippet == null) {
* // We have a snippet creation event
* switch (e.status) {
* case VALID:
* sb.append("Successful ");
* break;
* case RECOVERABLE_DEFINED:
* sb.append("With unresolved references ");
* break;
* case RECOVERABLE_NOT_DEFINED:
* sb.append("Possibly reparable, failed ");
* break;
* case REJECTED:
* sb.append("Failed ");
* break;
* }
* if (e.previousStatus == Status.NONEXISTENT) {
* sb.append("addition");
* } else {
* sb.append("modification");
* }
* sb.append(" of ");
* sb.append(e.snippet.source());
* System.out.println(sb);
* if (e.value != null) {
* System.out.printf("Value is: %s\n", e.value);
* }
* System.out.flush();
* }
* }
* } while (true);
* }
* System.out.println("\nGoodbye");
* }
* }
* }
* </pre>
* <p>
* To register for status change events use
* {@link jdk.jshell.JShell#onSnippetEvent(java.util.function.Consumer)}.
* These events are only generated by <code>eval</code> and <code>drop</code>,
* the return values of these methods are the list of events generated by that
* call. So, as in the example above, events can be used without registering
* to receive events.
* <p>
* If you experiment with this example, you will see that failing to terminate
* a statement or variable declaration with a semi-colon will simply fail.
* An unfinished entry (for example a desired multi-line method) will also just
* fail after one line. The utilities in {@link jdk.jshell.SourceCodeAnalysis}
* provide source boundary and completeness analysis to address cases like
* those. <code>SourceCodeAnalysis</code> also provides suggested completions
* of input, as might be used in tab-completion.
*
* @since 9
*/
package jdk.jshell;