Saw some recent activity around lang 3.8, and remembered about this issue, and 
then looked for this thread.

Gilles' point is really good! Here's the Java 9 docs with the deprecation 
warning, copied below as well 
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/index.html?java/util/Observable.html


"This class and the Observer interface have been deprecated. The event model 
supported by Observer and Observable is quite limited, the order of 
notifications delivered by Observable is unspecified, and state changes are not 
in one-for-one correspondence with notifications. For a richer event model, 
consider using the java.beans package.  For reliable and ordered messaging 
among threads, consider using one of the concurrent data structures in the 
java.util.concurrent package. For reactive streams style programming, see the 
Flow API."



So I guess the best we can do right now is add the @deprecated annotations, 
with an explanation in the javadocs. And also add a note about it in the 
release notes.

Does that sound like a good plan? Adding a link to this thread in the pull 
request as well.


Cheers
Bruno




________________________________
From: Stephen Colebourne <scolebou...@joda.org>
To: Commons Developers List <dev@commons.apache.org> 
Sent: Monday, 11 June 2018 9:26 AM
Subject: Re: [LANG] Java 9 problems because of dependencies to java.desktop 
(Was: Re: [LANG] Thoughts about Lang 4.0)



Good spot. I think that means [lang] would have to have its own copy
of the JDK interfaces. or just deprecate the functionality without
replacement.
Stephen

On 10 June 2018 at 22:11, Gilles <gil...@harfang.homelinux.org> wrote:
> Hello.
>
> On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 21:34:49 +0200, Oliver Heger wrote:
>>
>> Hi Bruno,
>>
>> Am 10.06.2018 um 00:52 schrieb Bruno P. Kinoshita:
>>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> There is a patch [1] for LANG-1339 [2] that I would like to merge. The
>>> discussion around this issue can be found in the rest of this e-mail thread.
>>>
>>> The patch basically deprecates the existing classes that depend on
>>> java.desktop, and provide alternative implementations. The previous classes
>>> used java.desktop classes for the PropertyChangeListener. And the
>>> alternative ones instead use Java 7's java.util.Observer.
>
>
> Is it a good idea to use deprecated classes[1] in new code?
>
> Regards,
> Gilles
>
> [1] https://docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/java/util/Observable.html
>
>
>>>
>>>
>>> This will make it easier to provide [lang] as java 9, without requiring
>>> users to include a dependency to java.desktop.
>>> Planning to merge it during the next week if there are no objections
>>> here.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Bruno
>>
>>
>> agreed. This seems to be the best what we can do.
>>
>> Oliver
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> [1] https://github.com/apache/commons-lang/pull/275
>>>
>>> [2] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LANG-1339
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ________________________________From: Benedikt Ritter
>>> <brit...@apache.org>
>>> To: Commons Developers List <dev@commons.apache.org>
>>> Sent: Monday, 5 June 2017 10:49 PM
>>> Subject: [LANG] Java 9 problems because of dependencies to java.desktop
>>> (Was: Re: [LANG] Thoughts about Lang 4.0)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> Am 25.05.2017 um 18:23 schrieb Oliver Heger
>>>> <oliver.he...@oliver-heger.de>:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Am 24.05.2017 um 13:55 schrieb Stephen Colebourne:
>>>>>
>>>>> On 23 May 2017 at 17:17, sebb <seb...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Yes, the
>>>>>>> code compiles and both can be on the classpath, but it is a pain to
>>>>>>> use, just a different kind of hell.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I don't see what the problem is here.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Library A that depends on lang3 returns a Pair.
>>>>> Library B that depends on lang4 takes a Pair.
>>>>> Application cannot pass Pair from A to the B without conversion.
>>>>>
>>>>> My point is that it is possible to over-worry about jar hell.
>>>>> Joda-Time removed some methods when it went from v1.x to v2.x, but
>>>>> didn't change package name or maven co-ordinates. It was far more
>>>>> important that end-users didn't have two different LocalDate classes
>>>>> (a problem that couldn't be avoided when moving to Java 8). I've never
>>>>> seen any feedback about the incompatibility causing jar hell.
>>>>>
>>>>> The same is true here. It is vital to think properly about which is
>>>>> the worse choice, not just assume that jar hell must always be
>>>>> avoided.
>>>>>
>>>>> I remain completely unconvinced that removing these two problematic
>>>>> methods justifies the lang4 package name, forcing end-users to have
>>>>> three copies of the library on the classpath. It should need much,
>>>>> much more to justify lang4 package name. In fact I've yet to hear
>>>>> anything else much in this thread that justifies a major release.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I also think that a new major release just to fix this problem would be
>>>> overkill and cause clients even more trouble.
>>>>
>>>> Would the following approach work as a compromise:
>>>>
>>>> - [lang] declares an optional dependency to the desktop module.
>>>> - All affected classes (AbstractCircuitBreaker and its two sub classes)
>>>> are marked as deprecated.
>>>> - Copies are created from the original classes with slightly changed
>>>> names or in a new package (tbd). These copies use a new change listener
>>>> mechanism.
>>>>
>>>> IIUC, the resulting [lang] module can now be used without the dependency
>>>> to desktop when the new classes are used. The dependency will only be
>>>> needed for the deprecated versions.
>>>
>>>
>>> Let’s do it like this. Sounds like the right way to me.
>>>
>>> Benedikt
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Oliver
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Stephen
>>>>>
>
>
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