Hi Joe, thank you for looking it into further.
Yes, I agree the chances of collision is very rare, as sub-millisecond
difference in two objects. So fine with the version 01.
Naoto
On 8/6/20 12:18 PM, Joe Wang wrote:
Thanks Naoto, Roger for the review!
For Naoto's concern about the equals method using EonAndYear and
FractionalSecond, I did cut corners using the all int getXXX method. The
rational was: it fulfills the equals-hashcode contract just fine, is
consistent with the existing implementation, and concise. This API was
introduced since 1.5, but I have yet to see any usage of EonAndYear, and
very rarely FractionalSecond. The chances collisions occur due to these
differences are very low.
But I understand your concern. To be precise or exact as equals(), we
would need to call getFractionalSecond and EonAndYear. Here's what that
would look like:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~joehw/jdk16/8246816/webrev_02/
To me, I like version 1 for the reasons above:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~joehw/jdk16/8246816/webrev_01/
What would you think?
Regards,
Joe
On 8/5/20 6:13 PM, naoto.s...@oracle.com wrote:
Hi Joe,
For the consistency with equals(), just wondering if the sub-second
element should be obtained with getFractionalSecond() instead of
getMillisecond(), as the equals() subsequently calls it in
internalCompare() method. Also should it call getEonAndYear()
appropriately for the year?
Naoto
On 8/5/20 4:37 PM, Joe Wang wrote:
Hello,
Please review a fix for the hashCode generation.
JBS: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8246816
webrev: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~joehw/jdk16/8246816/webrev/
Thanks,
Joe