Implementing an interface with two abstract methods by a lambda expression

Soumya Kanti Naskar picture Soumya Kanti Naskar · Mar 26, 2016 · Viewed 10.8k times · Source

In Java 8 the lambda expression is introduced to help with the reduction of boilerplate code. If the interface has only one method it works fine. If it consists of multiple methods, then none of the methods work. How can I handle multiple methods?

We may go for the following example

public interface I1()
{
    void show1();
    void show2();
}

Then what will be the structure of the main function to define the methods in the main itself?

Answer

Yassin Hajaj picture Yassin Hajaj · Mar 26, 2016

Lambda expressions are only usable with functional interface as said by Eran but if you really need multiple methods within the interfaces, you may change the modifiers to default or static and override them within the classes that implement them if necessary.

public class Test {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        I1 i1 = () -> System.out.println(); // NOT LEGAL
        I2 i2 = () -> System.out.println(); // TOTALLY LEGAL
        I3 i3 = () -> System.out.println(); // TOTALLY LEGAL
    }
}

interface I1 {
    void show1();
    void show2();
}

interface I2 {
    void show1();
    default void show2() {}
}

interface I3 {
    void show1();
    static void show2 () {}
}

Inheritance

You shouldn't forget the inherited methods.

Here, I2 inherits show1 and show2 and thus can not be a functional interface.

public class Test {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        I1 i1 = () -> System.out.println(); // NOT LEGAL BUT WE SAW IT EARLIER
        I2 i2 = () -> System.out.println(); // NOT LEGAL
    }
}

interface I1 {
    void show1();
    void show2();
}

interface I2 extends I1 {
    void show3();
}

Annotation

To make sure your interface is a functional interface, you may add the following annotation @FunctionalInterface

@FunctionalInterface <------- COMPILATION ERROR : Invalid '@FunctionalInterface' annotation; I1 is not a functional interface
interface I1 {
    void show1();
    void show2();
}

@FunctionalInterface
interface I2 {
    void show3();
}