From ac96ae7d96141fe728272f10290498322b6e4390 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Boris Verkhovskiy Date: Sat, 28 Sep 2024 19:28:34 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Minor edits --- java.html.markdown | 11 +++++------ 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/java.html.markdown b/java.html.markdown index 7d2fb223..24a9a47f 100644 --- a/java.html.markdown +++ b/java.html.markdown @@ -218,18 +218,17 @@ public class LearnJava { var x = 100; // int var y = 1.90; // double var z = 'a'; // char - var p = "tanu"; //String + var p = "tanu"; // String var q = false; // boolean // Strings String fooString = "My String Is Here!"; - // Java 14 onwards - Text Blocks + // Text blocks vat textBlock = """ This is a in Java """; - // \n is an escaped character that starts a new line String barString = "Printing on a new line?\nNo Problem!"; // \t is an escaped character that adds a tab character @@ -870,9 +869,9 @@ public abstract class Mammal() } } -//Java Records (introduced in Java 14, finalized in Java 16) are a concise way to define immutable data carrier classes, -//automatically generating boilerplate code like constructors, equals(), hashCode(), and toString(). -//This automatically creates an immutable class Person with fields name and age. +// Java Records are a concise way to define immutable data carrier classes, automatically +// generating boilerplate code like constructors, equals(), hashCode()and toString(). +// This automatically creates an immutable class Person with fields name and age. public record Person(String name, int age) {} Person p = new Person("Alice", 30);