A method I am calling in run() in a class that implements Runnable) is designed to be throwing an exception.
But the Java compiler won\'t let me do that and suggests
Some people try to convince you that you have to play by the rules. Listen, but whether you obey, you should decide yourself depending on your situation. The reality is "you SHOULD play by the rules" (not "you MUST play by the rules"). Just be aware that if you do not play by the rules, there might be consequences.
The situation not only applies in the situation of Runnable, but with Java 8 also very frequently in the context of Streams and other places where functional interfaces have been introduced without the possibility to deal with checked exceptions. For example, Consumer, Supplier, Function, BiFunction and so on have all been declared without facilities to deal with checked exceptions.
So what are the situations and options?
In the below text, Runnable is representative of any functional interface that doesn't declare exceptions, or declares exceptions too limited for the use case at hand.
Runnable somewhere yourself, and could replace Runnable with something else.
Runnable with Callable. Basically the same thing, but allowed to throw exceptions; and has to return null in the end, which is a mild annoyance.Runnable with your own custom @FunctionalInterface that can throw exactly those exceptions that you want.Callable instead of Runnable.RuntimeException.You can try the following. It's a bit of a hack, but sometimes a hack is what we need. Because, whether an exception should be checked or unchecked is defined by its type, but practically should actually be defined by the situation.
@FunctionalInterface
public interface ThrowingRunnable extends Runnable {
@Override
default void run() {
try {
tryRun();
} catch (final Throwable t) {
throwUnchecked(t);
}
}
private static void throwUnchecked(Throwable t) {
throw (E) t;
}
void tryRun() throws Throwable;
}
I prefer this over new RuntimeException(t) because it has a shorter stack trace.
You can now do:
executorService.submit((ThrowingRunnable) () -> {throw new Exception()});
Disclaimer: The ability to perform unchecked casts in this way might actually be removed in future versions of Java, when generics type information is processed not only at compile time, but also at runtime.