I understand you can't return from a ifPresent()
so this example does not work:
public boolean checkSomethingIfPresent() {
mightReturnAString().ifPresent((item) -> {
if (item.equals("something")) {
// Do some other stuff like use "something" in API calls
return true; // Does not compile
}
});
return false;
}
Where mightReturnAString()
could return a valid string or an empty optional. What I have done that works is:
public boolean checkSomethingIsPresent() {
Optional<String> result = mightReturnAString();
if (result.isPresent()) {
String item = result.get();
if (item.equals("something") {
// Do some other stuff like use "something" in API calls
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
which is longer and does not feel much different to just checking for nulls in the first place. I feel like there must be a more succinct way using Optional.
I think all you're looking for is simply filter
and check for the presence then:
return result.filter(a -> a.equals("something")).isPresent();