What is closure? It is supposed to be included in Java 7. (Closures were discussed for inclusion in Java 7, but in the end were not included. -ed) Can anyone please provide me with some reliable references from where I can learn stuff about closures?
7 Answers
A closure is a block of code that can be referenced (and passed around) with access to the variables of the enclosing scope.
Since Java 1.1, anonymous inner class have provided this facility in a highly verbose manner. They also have a restriction of only being able to use final
(and definitely assigned) local variables. (Note, even non-final
local variables are in scope, but cannot be used.)
Java SE 8 is intended to have a more concise version of this for single-method interfaces*, called "lambdas". Lambdas have much the same restrictions as anonymous inner classes, although some details vary randomly.
Lambdas are being developed under Project Lambda and JSR 335.
*Originally the design was more flexible allowing Single Abstract Methods (SAM) types. Unfortunately the new design is less flexible, but does attempt to justify allowing implementation within interfaces.

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Here is Neal Gafter's blog one of the pioneers introducing closures in Java. His post on closures from January 28, 2007 is named A Definition of Closures On his blog there is lots of information to get you started as well as videos. An here is an excellent Google talk - Advanced Topics In Programming Languages - Closures For Java with Neal Gafter, as well.
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2Do you have a more specific link than the overall blog? – I82Much Nov 11 '14 at 04:50
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2Try this http://gafter.blogspot.co.uk/2007/01/definition-of-closures.html – Lydia Ralph Apr 24 '15 at 10:09
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1If anyone is dumb like me and if you are beating your head against the wall just to know What the hack is this Closure....then here you go.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nj3_DMUXEbE – Piyush Kukadiya Jan 02 '17 at 07:35
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i cant imagine implementing closures in a language that didnt initially have them..kinda crazy – Alexander Mills Mar 01 '19 at 09:42
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Alexander Mills just curious.. why? – Bartzilla Mar 01 '19 at 10:36
According to Tom Hawtin
A closure is a block of code that can be referenced (and passed around) with access to the variables of the enclosing scope.
Now I'm trying to emulate the JavaScript closure example on Wikipedia, with a "straigth" translation to Java, in the hope to be useful:
//ECMAScript
var f, g;
function foo() {
var x = 0;
f = function() { return ++x; };
g = function() { return --x; };
x = 1;
print('inside foo, call to f(): ' + f()); // "2"
}
foo();
print('call to g(): ' + g()); // "1"
print('call to f(): ' + f()); // "2"
Now the java part: Function1 is "Functor" interface with arity 1 (one argument). Closure is the class implementing the Function1, a concrete Functor that acts as function (int -> int). In the main() method I just instantiate foo as a Closure object, replicating the calls from the JavaScript example. The IntBox class is just a simple container, it behave like an array of 1 int:
int a[1] = {0}
interface Function1 {
public final IntBag value = new IntBag();
public int apply();
}
class Closure implements Function1 {
private IntBag x = value;
Function1 f;
Function1 g;
@Override
public int apply() {
// print('inside foo, call to f(): ' + f()); // "2"
// inside apply, call to f.apply()
System.out.println("inside foo, call to f.apply(): " + f.apply());
return 0;
}
public Closure() {
f = new Function1() {
@Override
public int apply() {
x.add(1);
return x.get();
}
};
g = new Function1() {
@Override
public int apply() {
x.add(-1);
return x.get();
}
};
// x = 1;
x.set(1);
}
}
public class ClosureTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
// foo()
Closure foo = new Closure();
foo.apply();
// print('call to g(): ' + g()); // "1"
System.out.println("call to foo.g.apply(): " + foo.g.apply());
// print('call to f(): ' + f()); // "2"
System.out.println("call to foo.f.apply(): " + foo.f.apply());
}
}
It prints:
inside foo, call to f.apply(): 2
call to foo.g.apply(): 1
call to foo.f.apply(): 2

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Please see this wiki page for definition of closure.
And this page for closure in Java 8: http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/lambda-dev/2011-September/003936.html
Also look at this Q&A: Closures in Java 7
Java Closures are going to be a part of J2SE 8 and is set to be released by the end of 2012.
Java 8's closures support include the concept of Lambda Expressions, Method Reference, Constructor Reference and the Default Methods.
For more information and working examples for this please visit: http://amitrp.blogspot.in/2012/08/at-first-sight-with-closures-in-java.html

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1Hmm, however Java 8 doesn't allow modification of closure variable. Good article. – nawfal Jul 05 '14 at 13:18
Yes,Closure (Lambda Expressions) is the new feature with the upcoming Java SE 8 release. You can get more info about this from the below link: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/lambdaexpressions.html

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A closure implementation for Java 5, 6, and 7
http://mseifed.blogspot.se/2012/09/bringing-closures-to-java-5-6-and-7.html
It contains all one could ask for...

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The link goes to some text describing it but the code linked to from that page doesn't exist. Where is the implementation? – Jerry Jeremiah Oct 14 '14 at 23:06
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@JerryJeremiah Here it is, it has different name now, also all of the versions orignally present are not there ( to support non-final access and more through abstract classes, it might be added again for < Java 8 versions, what platform are you looking for?) : https://bitbucket.org/momomo/opensource/src – mjs Oct 16 '14 at 10:55
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