The Callable
and Supplier
functional interfaces in java.util.concurrent
and java.util.function
packages respectively have the following signature-
public interface Callable<V> {
V call() throws Exception;
}
public interface Supplier<T> {
T get();
}
Are there some specific use case where each one of them fit more than the other?
Their difference in usage can be seen from their respective documentation:
A task that returns a result and may throw an exception. Implementors define a single method with no arguments called call.
The Callable interface is similar to Runnable, in that both are designed for classes whose instances are potentially executed by another thread.
Represents a supplier of results.
There is no requirement that a new or distinct result be returned each time the supplier is invoked.
This means that the caller of Callable.call
expects an exception to be thrown and will handle the exception accordingly. This is useful for tasks like reading and writing to files, where many kinds of IOException
s can be thrown. Callable
is also designed to be run on another thread.
Supplier
on the other hand, is very general. It just "supplies a value" and that's it.
So Callable
is more specialised than Supplier
. If you are not dealing with another thread or your task is very unlikely to throw an exception, Supplier
is recommended.