Java 8 Optional. Why of and ofNullable?

hades :

I have a question regarding Java 8's Optional, the purpose of which is to tackle NullPointerException exceptions.

The question is, what is the reason for having both types to let us choose:

Optional.of(T value)     <-----non-null value, null value will throw NPE
Optional.ofNullable(T value)   <----- nullable value

Because what I expect is, when I use:

Optional.of(nullValue);

It won't throw a NullPointerException.


Expanded my question after some replies:

Why would people opt for Optional instead of normal if-else for null checking?

Naman :

The javadoc of Optional.of reads that explicitly :

@throws NullPointerException if value is null

and that is where the requirement of handling the cases as expected by you comes into picture with the use of Optional.ofNullable which is a small block of code as :

public static <T> Optional<T> ofNullable(T value) {
    return value == null ? empty() : of(value); // 'Optional.of'
}

That said, the decision of choosing one over the other would still reside with the application design as if your value could possibly be null or not.


On your expectation part, that was not what the Optional was actually intended for. The API note clarifies this further (formatting mine):

Optional is primarily intended for use as a method return type where there is a clear need to represent "no result," and where using null is likely to cause error. A variable whose type is Optional should never itself be null; it should always point to an Optional instance.


purpose of Optional is to tackle NullPointerException exception.

Aside: Just to call it out clearly, that the choice would of course implicitly let you define if an NPE should be thrown at runtime or not. It's not determined at the compile time though.

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