String Templates (Preview)

Changes to the Java® Language Specification • Version 21.0.3+7-LTS-152

This document describes changes to the Java Language Specification to support String Templates, a preview feature of Java SE 21. See JEP 430 for an overview of the feature.

Changes are described with respect to existing sections of the JLS. New text is indicated like this and deleted text is indicated like this. Explanation and discussion, as needed, is set aside in grey boxes.

Changelog:

2023-05-26: Minor editorial changes.

2023-03-29: Remove SimpleProcessor and StringProcessor interfaces.

2023-03-23: Reflect new package organization and renaming.

2023-03-01: Further minor changes.

2023-02-22: Small changes following feedback.

2023-02-09: Third draft. In addition to various editorial changes, the other significant changes include:

2022-11-15: Second draft. Main changes surround details of lexical and syntactical grammars. New terminology introduced for templates.

2022-01-20: First draft released.

Chapter 2: Grammars

2.1 Context-Free Grammars

A context-free grammar consists of a number of productions. Each production has an abstract symbol called a nonterminal as its left-hand side, and a sequence of one or more nonterminal and terminal symbols as its right-hand side. For each grammar, the terminal symbols are drawn from a specified alphabet.

Starting from a sentence consisting of a single distinguished nonterminal, called the goal symbol, a given context-free grammar specifies a language, namely, the set of possible sequences of terminal symbols that can result from repeatedly replacing any nonterminal in the sequence with a right-hand side of a production for which the nonterminal is the left-hand side.

Some grammars are ambiguous, in that starting with the goal symbol, there may be a number of distinct ways of applying the productions to end up with the same sequence of terminal symbols. Resolving ambiguities involves either preferring one particular way of applying productions over all the alternatives, or taking other contextual information into account.

2.2 The Lexical Grammar

A lexical grammar for the Java programming language is given in 3. This grammar has as its terminal symbols the characters of the Unicode character set. It defines a set of productions, starting from the goal symbol Input (3.5), that describe how sequences of Unicode characters (3.1) are translated into a sequence of input elements (3.2).

These input elements, with white space (3.6) and comments (3.7) discarded, form the terminal symbols for the syntactic grammar for the Java programming language and are called tokens (3.5). These tokens are include the identifiers (3.8), keywords (3.9), literals (3.10), separators (3.11), and operators (3.12) of the Java programming language.

The lexical grammar is ambiguous, and a number of rules determine how these ambiguities are resolved (3.5).

2.3 The Syntactic Grammar

The syntactic grammar for the Java programming language is given in Chapters 4, 6-10, 14, and 15. This grammar has as its terminal symbols the tokens defined by the lexical grammar. It defines a set of productions, starting from the goal symbol CompilationUnit (7.3), that describe how sequences of tokens can form syntactically correct programs.

In a small number of places the particular production of the syntactic grammar being followed provides context to resolve ambiguities in the lexical grammar (3.5).

For convenience, the syntactic grammar is presented all together in Chapter 19.

The rest of Chapter 2 is unchanged.

Chapter 3: Lexical Structure

This chapter specifies the lexical structure of the Java programming language.

Programs are written in Unicode (3.1), but lexical translations are provided (3.2) so that Unicode escapes (3.3) can be used to include any Unicode character using only ASCII characters. Line terminators are defined (3.4) to support the different conventions of existing host systems while maintaining consistent line numbers.

The Unicode characters resulting from the lexical translations are reduced to a sequence of input elements (3.5), which are white space (3.6), comments (3.7), and tokens. The tokens are the identifiers (3.8), keywords (3.9), literals (3.10), separators (3.11), and operators (3.12), and fragments (3.13) of the syntactic grammar.

3.1 Unicode

Programs are written using the Unicode character set (1.7). Information about this character set and its associated character encodings may be found at <https://www.unicode.org/>.

The Java SE Platform tracks the Unicode Standard as it evolves. The precise version of Unicode used by a given release is specified in the documentation of the class Character.

The Unicode standard was originally designed as a fixed-width 16-bit character encoding. It has since been changed to allow for characters whose representation requires more than 16 bits. The range of legal code points is now U+0000 to U+10FFFF, using the hexadecimal U+n notation. Characters whose code points are greater than U+FFFF are called supplementary characters. To represent the complete range of characters using only 16-bit units, the Unicode standard defines an encoding called UTF-16. In this encoding, supplementary characters are represented as pairs of 16-bit code units, the first from the high-surrogates range (U+D800 to U+DBFF), and the second from the low-surrogates range (U+DC00 to U+DFFF). For characters in the range U+0000 to U+FFFF, the values of code points and UTF-16 code units are the same.

The Java programming language represents text in sequences of 16-bit code units, using the UTF-16 encoding.

Some APIs of the Java SE Platform, primarily in the Character class, use 32-bit integers to represent code points as individual entities. The Java SE Platform provides methods to convert between 16-bit and 32-bit representations.

This specification uses the terms code point and UTF-16 code unit where the representation is relevant, and the generic term character where the representation is irrelevant to the discussion.

Except for comments (3.7), identifiers (3.8), and the contents of character literals, string literals, and text blocks, and templates (3.10.4, 3.10.5, 3.10.6, 3.13), all input elements (3.5) in a program are formed only from ASCII characters (or Unicode escapes (3.3) which result in ASCII characters).

ASCII (ANSI X3.4) is the American Standard Code for Information Interchange. The first 128 characters of the Unicode UTF-16 encoding are the ASCII characters.

3.5 Input Elements and Tokens

The input characters and line terminators that result from Unicode escape processing (3.3) and then input line recognition (3.4) are reduced to a sequence of input elements.

Input:
{InputElement} [Sub]
InputElement:
WhiteSpace
Comment
Token
Token:
Identifier
Keyword
Literal
Separator
Operator
Fragment
Sub:
the ASCII SUB character, also known as "control-Z"

Those input elements that are not white space or comments are tokens. The tokens are the terminal symbols of the syntactic grammar (2.3).

White space (3.6) and comments (3.7) can serve to separate tokens that, if adjacent, might be tokenized in another manner.

For example, the input characters - and = can form the operator token -= (3.12) only if there is no intervening white space or comment. As another example, the ten input characters staticvoid form a single identifier token while the eleven input characters static void (with an ASCII SP character between c and v) form a pair of keyword tokens, static and void, separated by white space.

As a special concession for compatibility with certain operating systems, the ASCII SUB character (\u001a, or control-Z) is ignored if it is the last character in the escaped input stream.

The Input production is ambiguous, meaning that for some sequences of input characters, there is more than one way to reduce the input characters to input elements (that is, to tokenize the input characters). Ambiguities are resolved as follows:

Consider two tokens x and y in the resulting input stream. If x precedes y, then we say that x is to the left of y and that y is to the right of x.

For example, in this simple piece of code:

class Empty {
}

we say that the } token is to the right of the { token, even though it appears, in this two-dimensional representation, downward and to the left of the { token. This convention about the use of the words left and right allows us to speak, for example, of the right-hand operand of a binary operator or of the left-hand side of an assignment.

3.10 Literals

3.10.7 Escape Sequences

In character literals, string literals, and text blocks, and fragments of a template (3.10.4, 3.10.5, 3.10.6, 3.13), the escape sequences allow for the representation of some nongraphic characters without using Unicode escapes (3.3), as well as the single quote, double quote, and backslash characters.

EscapeSequence:
\ b * (backspace BS, Unicode \u0008)*
\ s * (space SP, Unicode \u0020)*
\ t * (horizontal tab HT, Unicode \u0009)*
\ n * (linefeed LF, Unicode \u000a)*
\ f * (form feed FF, Unicode \u000c)*
\ r * (carriage return CR, Unicode \u000d)*
\ LineTerminator * (line continuation, no Unicode representation)*
\ " * (double quote ", Unicode \u0022)*
\ ' * (single quote ', Unicode \u0027)*
\ \ * (backslash \, Unicode \u005c)*
OctalEscape * (octal value, Unicode \u0000 to \u00ff)*
OctalEscape:
\ OctalDigit
\ OctalDigit OctalDigit
\ ZeroToThree OctalDigit OctalDigit #
OctalDigit:
(one of)
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
ZeroToThree:
(one of)
0 1 2 3

The OctalDigit production above comes from 3.10.1. Octal escapes are provided for compatibility with C, but can express only Unicode values \u0000 through \u00FF, so Unicode escapes are usually preferred.

It is a compile-time error if the character following a backslash in an escape sequence is not a LineTerminator or an ASCII b, s, t, n, f, r, ", ', \, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7.

An escape sequence in the content of a character literal, string literal, or text block, or fragment of a template is interpreted by replacing its \ and trailing character(s) with the single character denoted by the Unicode escape in the EscapeSequence grammar. The line continuation escape sequence has no corresponding Unicode escape, so is interpreted by replacing it with nothing.

The line continuation escape sequence can appear in a text block, but cannot appear in a character literal or a string literal because each disallows a LineTerminator.

The character sequence \{ is not an escape sequence but has special meaning when appearing in a template (3.13).

3.13 Fragments

A template (15.8.6) resembles either a string literal or a text block but contains one or more embedded expressions, which are expressions prefixed by the character sequence \{ and postfixed by the character }.

A fragment represents a non-expression part of a template.

Fragment:
StringTemplateBegin
StringTemplateMid
StringTemplateEnd
TextBlockTemplateBegin
TextBlockTemplateMid
TextBlockTemplateEnd
StringTemplateBegin:
" StringFragment \{
StringTemplateMid:
} StringFragment \{
StringTemplateEnd:
} StringFragment "
StringFragment:
{ StringCharacter }
TextBlockTemplateBegin:
""" { TextBlockWhiteSpace } LineTerminator TextBlockFragment \{
TextBlockTemplateMid:
} TextBlockFragment \{
TextBlockTemplateEnd:
} TextBlockFragment """
TextBlockFragment:
{ TextBlockCharacter }

The following productions from 3.10.5 and 3.10.6 are shown here for convenience:

StringCharacter:
InputCharacter but not " or \
EscapeSequence
TextBlockWhiteSpace:
WhiteSpace but not LineTerminator
LineTerminator:
the ASCII LF character, also known as "newline"
the ASCII CR character, also known as "return"
the ASCII CR character followed by the ASCII LF character
TextBlockCharacter:
InputCharacter but not \
EscapeSequence
LineTerminator

The content of a fragment is defined as follows:

It is a compile-time error for a line terminator (3.4) to appear in the content of a StringTemplateBegin, StringTemplateMid, or StringTemplateEnd token.

The content of a TextBlockTemplateBegin, TextBlockTemplateMid, or TextBlockTemplateEnd token is further transformed by applying the following step:

Whilst templates resemble string literals (and text blocks), they are not ambiguous, in the sense that it is not possible for a sequence of input characters to form both a syntactically correct string literal and a syntactically correct template. This is because a template must contain at least one embedded expression, but the sequence \{ that prefixes an embedded expression is not a valid escape sequence in a string literal (or text block).

However, the fragment productions do introduce ambiguities with the other token productions (3.5). These ambiguities are resolved as follows:

For example, consider the sequence of 18 input characters " \ { n e w i n t [ ] { 4 2 } } ". The first three input characters are reduced to a StringTemplateBegin. The next twelve input characters are reduced to the tokens Keyword (new), Keyword (int), Separator ([), Separator (]), Separator ({), and Literal (42). The next input character in the sequence, }, creates an ambiguity. It could be reduced to a Separator, or it could be reduced along with the following } and " input characters to a StringTemplateEnd. As the syntactic grammar would provide the context of the ArrayInitializer of an array creation expression (15.10.1), the rule above ensures that the input character } is reduced to a Separator. The remaining } and " input characters will then be reduced to a StringTemplateEnd.

Chapter 7: Packages and Modules

7.3 Compilation Units

CompilationUnit is the goal symbol (2.1) for the syntactic grammar (2.3) of Java programs. It is defined by the following production:

CompilationUnit:
OrdinaryCompilationUnit
ModularCompilationUnit
OrdinaryCompilationUnit:
[PackageDeclaration] {ImportDeclaration} {TopLevelClassOrInterfaceDeclaration}
ModularCompilationUnit:
{ImportDeclaration} ModuleDeclaration

An ordinary compilation unit consists of three parts, each of which is optional:

A modular compilation unit consists of a module declaration (7.7), optionally preceded by import declarations. The import declarations allow classes and interfaces from packages in this module and other modules, as well as static members of classes and interfaces, to be referred to using their simple names within the module declaration.

Every compilation unit implicitly imports the following:

  1. Every public class or interface declared in the predefined package java.lang, as if the declaration import java.lang.*; appeared at the beginning of each compilation unit immediately after any package declaration.
  1. The static member STR declared in the predefined class StringTemplate, as if the declaration import static java.lang.StringTemplate.STR; appeared at the beginning of each compilation unit immediately after any package declaration.

As a result, the names of all those implicitly imported classes and interfaces classes, interfaces and static fields are available as simple names in every compilation unit.

The host system determines which compilation units are observable, except for the compilation units in the predefined package java and its subpackages lang and io, which are all always observable.

The rest of §7.3 is unchanged.

7.5 Import Declarations

7.5.3 Single-Static-Import Declarations

A single-static-import declaration imports all accessible static members with a given simple name from a class or interface. This makes these static members available under their simple name in the module, class, and interface declarations of the compilation unit in which the single-static-import declaration appears.

SingleStaticImportDeclaration:
import static TypeName . Identifier ;

The TypeName must be the canonical name (6.7) of a class or interface.

The class or interface must be either a member of a named package, or a member of a class or interface whose outermost lexically enclosing class or interface declaration (8.1.3) is a member of a named package, or a compile-time error occurs.

It is a compile-time error if the named class or interface is not accessible (6.6).

The Identifier must name at least one static member of the named class or interface. It is a compile-time error if there is no static member of that name, or if all of the named members are not accessible.

It is permissible for one single-static-import declaration to import several fields, classes, or interfaces with the same name, or several methods with the same name and signature. This occurs when the named class or interface inherits multiple fields, member classes, member interfaces, or methods, all with the same name, from its own supertypes.

It is permitted for a single-static-import declaration to redundantly import static members that are already implicitly imported.

If two single-static-import declarations in the same compilation unit attempt to import classes or interface with the same simple name, then a compile-time error occurs, unless the two classes or interfaces are the same, in which case the duplicate declaration is ignored.

If a single-static-import declaration imports a class or interface whose simple name is x, and the compilation unit also declares a top level class or interface (7.6) whose simple name is x, a compile-time error occurs.

If a compilation unit contains both a single-static-import declaration that imports a class or interface whose simple name is x, and a single-type-import declaration (7.5.1) that imports a class or interface whose simple name is x, a compile-time error occurs, unless the two classes or interfaces are the same, in which case the duplicate declaration is ignored.

7.5.4 Static-Import-on-Demand Declarations

A static-import-on-demand declaration allows all accessible static members of a named class or interface to be imported as needed.

StaticImportOnDemandDeclaration:
import static TypeName . * ;

The TypeName must be the canonical name (6.7) of a class or interface.

The class or interface must be either a member of a named package, or a member of a class or interface whose outermost lexically enclosing class or interface declaration (8.1.3) is a member of a named package, or a compile-time error occurs.

It is a compile-time error if the named class or interface is not accessible (6.6).

It is permitted for a static-import-on-demand declaration to redundantly import static members that are already implicitly imported.

Two or more static-import-on-demand declarations in the same compilation unit may name the same class or interface; the effect is as if there was exactly one such declaration.

The rest of §7.5.4 is unchanged.

Chapter 12: Execution

12.5 Creation of New Class Instances

A new class instance is explicitly created when evaluation of a class instance creation expression (15.9) causes a class to be instantiated.

A new class instance may be implicitly created in the following situations:

Each of these situations identifies a particular constructor (8.8) to be called with specified arguments (possibly none) as part of the class instance creation process.

Whenever a new class instance is created, memory space is allocated for it with room for all the instance variables declared in the class and all the instance variables declared in each superclass of the class, including all the instance variables that may be hidden (8.3).

If there is not sufficient space available to allocate memory for the object, then creation of the class instance completes abruptly with an OutOfMemoryError. Otherwise, all the instance variables in the new object, including those declared in superclasses, are initialized to their default values (4.12.5).

Just before a reference to the newly created object is returned as the result, the indicated constructor is processed to initialize the new object using the following procedure:

  1. Assign the arguments for the constructor to newly created parameter variables for this constructor invocation.

  2. If this constructor begins with an explicit constructor invocation (8.8.7.1) of another constructor in the same class (using this), then evaluate the arguments and process that constructor invocation recursively using these same five steps. If that constructor invocation completes abruptly, then this procedure completes abruptly for the same reason; otherwise, continue with step 5.

  3. This constructor does not begin with an explicit constructor invocation of another constructor in the same class (using this). If this constructor is for a class other than Object, then this constructor will begin with an explicit or implicit invocation of a superclass constructor (using super). Evaluate the arguments and process that superclass constructor invocation recursively using these same five steps. If that constructor invocation completes abruptly, then this procedure completes abruptly for the same reason. Otherwise, continue with step 4.

  4. Execute the instance initializers and instance variable initializers for this class, assigning the values of instance variable initializers to the corresponding instance variables, in the left-to-right order in which they appear textually in the source code for the class. If execution of any of these initializers results in an exception, then no further initializers are processed and this procedure completes abruptly with that same exception. Otherwise, continue with step 5.

  5. Execute the rest of the body of this constructor. If that execution completes abruptly, then this procedure completes abruptly for the same reason. Otherwise, this procedure completes normally.

Unlike C++, the Java programming language does not specify altered rules for method dispatch during the creation of a new class instance. If methods are invoked that are overridden in subclasses in the object being initialized, then these overriding methods are used, even before the new object is completely initialized.

Example 12.5-1. Evaluation of Instance Creation

class Point {
    int x, y;
    Point() { x = 1; y = 1; }
}
class ColoredPoint extends Point {
    int color = 0xFF00FF;
}
class Test {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        ColoredPoint cp = new ColoredPoint();
        System.out.println(cp.color);
    }
}

Here, a new instance of ColoredPoint is created. First, space is allocated for the new ColoredPoint, to hold the fields x, y, and color. All these fields are then initialized to their default values (in this case, 0 for each field). Next, the ColoredPoint constructor with no arguments is first invoked. Since ColoredPoint declares no constructors, a default constructor of the following form is implicitly declared:

ColoredPoint() { super(); }

This constructor then invokes the Point constructor with no arguments. The Point constructor does not begin with an invocation of a constructor, so the Java compiler provides an implicit invocation of its superclass constructor of no arguments, as though it had been written:

Point() { super(); x = 1; y = 1; }

Therefore, the constructor for Object which takes no arguments is invoked.

The class Object has no superclass, so the recursion terminates here. Next, any instance initializers and instance variable initializers of Object are invoked. Next, the body of the constructor of Object that takes no arguments is executed. No such constructor is declared in Object, so the Java compiler supplies a default one, which in this special case is:

Object() { }

This constructor executes without effect and returns.

Next, all initializers for the instance variables of class Point are executed. As it happens, the declarations of x and y do not provide any initialization expressions, so no action is required for this step of the example. Then the body of the Point constructor is executed, setting x to 1 and y to 1.

Next, the initializers for the instance variables of class ColoredPoint are executed. This step assigns the value 0xFF00FF to color. Finally, the rest of the body of the ColoredPoint constructor is executed (the part after the invocation of super); there happen to be no statements in the rest of the body, so no further action is required and initialization is complete.

Example 12.5-2. Dynamic Dispatch During Instance Creation

class Super {
    Super() { printThree(); }
    void printThree() { System.out.println("three"); }
}
class Test extends Super {
    int three = (int)Math.PI;  // That is, 3
    void printThree() { System.out.println(three); }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Test t = new Test();
        t.printThree();
    }
}

This program produces the output:

0
3

This shows that the invocation of printThree in the constructor for class Super does not invoke the definition of printThree in class Super, but rather invokes the overriding definition of printThree in class Test. This method therefore runs before the field initializers of Test have been executed, which is why the first value output is 0, the default value to which the field three of Test is initialized. The later invocation of printThree in method main invokes the same definition of printThree, but by that point the initializer for instance variable three has been executed, and so the value 3 is printed.

Chapter 15: Expressions

15.8 Primary Expressions

Primary expressions include most of the simplest kinds of expressions, from which all others are constructed: literals, object creations, field accesses, method invocations, method references, and array accesses, and template expressions. A parenthesized expression is also treated syntactically as a primary expression.

Primary:
PrimaryNoNewArray
ArrayCreationExpression
PrimaryNoNewArray:
Literal
ClassLiteral
this
TypeName . this
( Expression )
ClassInstanceCreationExpression
FieldAccess
ArrayAccess
MethodInvocation
MethodReference
TemplateExpression

This part of the grammar of the Java programming language is unusual, in two ways. First, one might expect simple names, such as names of local variables and method parameters, to be primary expressions. For technical reasons, names are grouped together with primary expressions a little later when postfix expressions are introduced (15.14).

The technical reasons have to do with allowing left-to-right parsing of Java programs with only one-token lookahead. Consider the expressions (z[3]) and (z[]). The first is a parenthesized array access (15.10.3) and the second is the start of a cast (15.16). At the point that the look-ahead symbol is [, a left-to-right parse will have reduced the z to the nonterminal Name. In the context of a cast we prefer not to have to reduce the name to a Primary, but if Name were one of the alternatives for Primary, then we could not tell whether to do the reduction (that is, we could not determine whether the current situation would turn out to be a parenthesized array access or a cast) without looking ahead two tokens, to the token following the [. The grammar presented here avoids the problem by keeping Name and Primary separate and allowing either in certain other syntax rules (those for ClassInstanceCreationExpression, MethodInvocation, ArrayAccess, and PostfixExpression, though not FieldAccess because it uses an identifier directly). This strategy effectively defers the question of whether a Name should be treated as a Primary until more context can be examined.

The second unusual feature avoids a potential grammatical ambiguity in the expression "new int[3][3]" which in Java always means a single creation of a multidimensional array, but which, without appropriate grammatical finesse, might also be interpreted as meaning the same as "(new int[3])[3]".

This ambiguity is eliminated by splitting the expected definition of Primary into Primary and PrimaryNoNewArray. (This may be compared to the splitting of Statement into Statement and StatementNoShortIf (14.5) to avoid the "dangling else" problem.)

15.8.1 Lexical Literals

A literal (3.10) denotes a fixed, unchanging value.

The following production from 3.10 is shown here for convenience:

Literal:
IntegerLiteral
FloatingPointLiteral
BooleanLiteral
CharacterLiteral
StringLiteral
TextBlock
NullLiteral

The type of a literal is determined as follows:

An integer literal, floating point literal, boolean literal, or character literal evaluates to the value for which the literal is the source code representation. A string literal or text block evaluates to an instance of class String, as specified in 3.10.5 and 3.10.6. The null literal evaluates to the null reference.

Evaluation of a lexical literal always completes normally.

15.8.6 Template Expressions

A template expression provides a general means of combining literal text with the values of expressions. The text and expressions are specified by a template. The task of combining the text with the expressions' values is delegated to a template processor.

Simple interpolation of text and values into a String is available from a predefined template processor, STR (7.3). Other template processors may combine text and values in arbitrary ways to produce a result of a more sophisticated type than String.

TemplateExpression:
TemplateProcessor . TemplateArgument
TemplateProcessor:
Expression
TemplateArgument:
Template
StringLiteral
TextBlock
Template:
StringTemplate
TextBlockTemplate
StringTemplate:
StringTemplateBegin EmbeddedExpression
  { StringTemplateMid EmbeddedExpression } StringTemplateEnd
TextBlockTemplate:
TextBlockTemplateBegin EmbeddedExpression
  { TextBlockTemplateMid EmbeddedExpression } TextBlockTemplateEnd
EmbeddedExpression:
[ Expression ]

The following productions from 3.13 are shown here for convenience:

StringTemplateBegin:
" StringFragment \{
StringTemplateMid:
} StringFragment \{
StringTemplateEnd:
} StringFragment "
StringFragment:
{ StringCharacter }
TextBlockTemplateBegin:
""" TextBlockFragment \{
TextBlockTemplateMid:
} TextBlockFragment \{
TextBlockTemplateEnd:
} TextBlockFragment """
TextBlockFragment:
{ TextBlockCharacter }

A template is either a string template or a text block template. A string template (respectively, a text block template) resembles a string literal (a text block) but contains one or more embedded expressions, which are expressions prefixed by the character sequence \{ and postfixed by the character }. If nothing appears between the character sequences \{ and }, the embedded expression is implicitly taken to be the null literal (3.10.8).

A string template with n embedded expressions (n>0) consists of the alternate interleaving of n+1 fragments with the n embedded expressions. The first fragment is a StringTemplateBegin token (3.13); the next n-1 fragments are StringTemplateMid tokens; the last fragment is a StringTemplateEnd token.

Here is the breakdown of some string templates: "\{42} is the answer." consists of a StringTemplateBegin token ("\{), followed by the expression 42 (an integer literal), followed by the StringTemplateEnd token (} is the answer."). The string template "The answer is \{x+y}!" consists of a StringTemplateBegin token ("The answer is \{), followed by the expression x+y, followed by a StringTemplateEnd token (}!"). The string template "Hello \{name} from \{address.city}," consists of a StringTemplateBegin token ("Hello \{), followed by the expression name, followed by a StringTemplateMid token (} from \{), followed by the expression address.city, followed by a StringTemplateEnd token (},"). Finally, the string template "Customer name: \{}" consists of a StringTemplateBegin token ("Customer name: \{), followed by the (implicit) expression null, followed by a StringTemplateEnd token (}").

A text block template with n embedded expressions (n>0) consists of the alternate interleaving of n+1 fragments with the n embedded expressions. The first fragment is a TextBlockTemplateBegin token (3.13); the next n-1 fragments are TextBlockTemplateMid tokens; the last fragment is a TextBlockTemplateEnd token.

The fragment strings of a template represent the literal text that surrounds the embedded expressions. Fragment strings are determined as follows:

For example, the fragment strings of the string template "\{42} is the answer." are first the empty string, followed by the string " is the answer.". The fragment strings of the string template "The answer is \{x+y}!" are the strings "The answer is ", followed by "!". The fragment strings of the string template "Hello \{name} from \{address.city}," are the strings "Hello ", followed by " from ", followed by ",". Finally, the fragment strings of the string template "Customer name: \{}" are first the string "Customer name: ", followed by the empty string.

The fragment strings of the text block template

"""
                Name:
                \{customerName}"""

are first the string whose content is the six character sequence N a m e : LF (note that the incidental whitespace has been removed), followed by the empty string.

The type, TP, of the TemplateProcessor expression must be a subtype of StringTemplate.Processor, or a compile-time error occurs. If TP is a subtype of StringTemplate.Processor<Result,Exc>, where Result and Exc are the type arguments of the parameterized type, then the type of the template expression is Result. If TP is a subtype of the raw type StringTemplate.Processor, then the type of the template expression is Object.

StringTemplate.Processor<R,E> is a generic functional interface (9.8), whose single abstract method, process, has a StringTemplate formal parameter, a return type R, and a throws clause with the type E.

There is no restriction on the type of any embedded expression appearing in a Template.

Example 15.8.6-1. Simple Templates

The following simple examples make use of the static member STR of StringTemplate that is implicitly imported in every compilation unit and implements simple string interpolation.

// A string template with simple embedded string variables
String firstName = "Joan";
String lastName  = "Smith";
String fullName  = STR."\{firstName} \{lastName}";

// A string template with embedded integer expressions
int x = 10, y = 20;
String s1 = STR."\{x} + \{y} = \{x + y}";

// Embedded expressions can invoke methods and access fields
String s2 = STR."You have a \{getOfferType()} waiting for you!";
String s3 = STR."Access at \{req.date} \{req.time} from \{req.ipAddress}";

// A text block template modeling an HTML element with
// embedded expressions
String title = "My Web Page";
String text  = "Hello, world";
String html = STR."""
        <html>
          <head>
            <title>\{title}</title>
          </head>
          <body>
            <p>\{text}</p>
          </body>
        </html>
        """;

// A text block template modeling a JSON value with
// embedded expressions
String name    = "Joan Smith";
String phone   = "555-123-4567";
String address = "1 Maple Drive, Anytown";
String json = STR."""
    {
        "name":    "\{name}",
        "phone":   "\{phone}",
        "address": "\{address}"
    }
    """;

At run time, a template expression is evaluated as follows:

  1. The TemplateProcessor expression is evaluated. If the resulting value is null, then a NullPointerException is thrown and the entire template expression completes abruptly for that reason. If evaluation of the TemplateProcessor completes abruptly, the entire template expression completes abruptly for the same reason.

  2. If the TemplateArgument is a StringLiteral or a TextBlock, then the result of this step is an instance of StringTemplate, produced as if by invocation of the static method StringTemplate.of with the argument TemplateArgument.

    If the TemplateArgument is a Template, then the embedded expressions e1, ..., en (n > 0) are evaluated to yield embedded values, v1, ..., vn. The embedded expressions are evaluated in the order that they appear in the Template, from left to right. If evaluation of any embedded expression completes abruptly, then the entire template expression completes abruptly for the same reason.

    Otherwise, the result of this step is a reference to an instance of a class with the following properties:

    • The class implements the StringTemplate interface.

    • The instance method values returns an instance of java.util.List containing the embedded values v1, ..., vn, in that order.

    • The instance method fragments returns an instance of java.util.List containing exactly the fragment strings of the template, in order.

    • The instance method interpolate of the class instance returns the strict alternate interleaved string concatenation of (1) exactly the fragment strings of the template, in order, and (2) the embedded values v1, ..., vn, in that order, beginning with the first fragment string.

  3. The result of evaluating the template expression is determined as if by invoking the method process on the result of step 1, with the argument given by the result of step 2. If this method invocation completes abruptly, the entire template expression completes abruptly for the same reason.

That is, the meaning of the template expression:

e."..." // "..." is a valid string template

is equivalent to the meaning of the method invocation expression:

e.process(t)

where t refers to an instance of StringTemplate that encapsulates both the literal text and the values of the embedded expressions in the template.

Example 15.8.6-2. Simple Template Processors.

The interpolate method of StringTemplate provides a convenient way to concatenate the fragment strings and embedded values of a template to produce a string. In the following example, UPPER both interpolates a given template and then converts all the letters to uppercase.

StringTemplate.Processor<String, RuntimeException> UPPER = (StringTemplate st) ->
    st.interpolate().toUpperCase();

String name = "Joan";
String result = UPPER."My name is \{name}";

After executing these statements, result will be initialized with the string "MY NAME IS JOAN".

Example 15.8.6-3. More Complex Template Processors.

More complex template processors can use the following simple programming pattern. In the following example, MY_UPPER_STRINGS first converts the fragment strings (returned by the fragments method) to uppercase before using the interpolate method (using the embedded values returned by the values method) to return a string result.

StringTemplate.Processor<String, RuntimeException> MY_UPPER_STRINGS = (StringTemplate st) -> {
    List<String> fragments = st.fragments()
        .stream()
        .map(String::toUpperCase)
        .toList();
    List<Object> values = st.values();
    return StringTemplate.interpolate(fragments, values);
};

String name = "Joan";
String result = MY_UPPER_STRINGS."My name is \{name}";

After executing these statements, result will be initialized with the string "MY NAME IS Joan"`.

In the following example, MY_UPPER_VALUES converts the embedded expressions to upper case strings (taking care to handle any null values) before interpolating.

StringTemplate.Processor<String, RuntimeException> MY_UPPER_VALUES = (StringTemplate st) -> {
    List<String> values = st.values()
        .stream()
        .map((o) -> (o==null)?"":o.toString().toUpperCase())
        .toList();
    return StringTemplate.interpolate(st.fragments(), values);
};

String title = null;
String firstName = "Joan";
String familyName = "Smith";
String result = MY_UPPER_VALUES."Welcome \{title}\{firstName} \{familyName}";

After executing these statements, result will be initialized with the string "Welcome JOAN SMITH".

Example 15.8.6-4. Template Processors That Do Not Return Strings

It is possible to process a template and return a value other than a string. In the following example, JSON returns an instance of a class JSONObject and not a string.

StringTemplate.Processor<JSONObject, RuntimeException> JSON =
    (StringTemplate st) -> new JSONObject(st.interpolate());

String name    = "Joan Smith";
String phone   = "555-123-4567";
String address = "1 Maple Drive, Anytown";

JSONObject doc = JSON."""
    {
        "name":    "\{name}",
        "phone":   "\{phone}",
        "address": "\{address}"
    }
    """;

Example 15.8.6-6. Template Processors That Can Throw an Exception

It is sometimes useful to validate a given template and throw an exception if the template does not meet the requirements.

In the following example, JSON_VALIDATE converts a given template into an instance of a class JSONObject, but first checks that the intermediate interpolated string begins and ends with matching braces (ignoring any leading or trailing white space). If either of these checks fail then a JSONException is thrown, otherwise the corresponding JSONObject instance is returned.

StringTemplate.Processor<JSONObject, JSONException> JSON_VALIDATE = (StringTemplate st) -> {
    String stripped = st.interpolate().strip();
    if (!stripped.startsWith("{") || !stripped.endsWith("}")) {
        throws new JSONException("Missing brace");
    }
    return new JSONObject(stripped);
};

String name    = "Joan Smith";
String phone   = "555-123-4567";
String address = "1 Maple Drive, Anytown";
try {
    JSONObject doc = JSON_VALIDATE."""
        {
            "name":    "\{name}",
            "phone":   "\{phone}",
            "address": "\{address}"
        }
        """;
} catch (JSONException ex) {
    ...
}