Assertions being built into Java is nice and they’ve been around since version 1.4. They predate type parameters! I have never seen them being used and the reason always seems to be that because you can’t count on them being turned on because they’re off by default.

The only theoretical use I can think of it for “executable comments”, as in something like the example below, but they’re annoying as the IDE will usually complain that it is always true (with no way to specifically disable warning for always true assertions, only always true conditions in general).

if (condition) {
  // Very long block of code
} else {
  assert !condition; // Primarily a reminder for when the if condition is not easily seen
}

Here it doesn’t matter if the assertion is executed or not because it is just a reminder. The idea being that code sticks out more than a comment.

  • TomM
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    I would avoid using it that way too. Seems like it could be a source of confusion in the future (another dev may assume it offers protection it doesn’t), and I would guess most IDEs would flag it as unnecessary.

    I do my best to avoid huge if blocks, but when they do happen, I prefer a small, simple comment noting the purpose.