/* * Copyright (C) 2021 The Guava Authors * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under * the License. */ package dev.brighten.antivpn.utils; /** A utility method to perform unchecked casts to suppress errors produced by nullness analyses. */ final class NullnessCasts { /** * Accepts a {@code @Nullable T} and returns a plain {@code T}, without performing any check that * that conversion is safe. * *

This method is intended to help with usages of type parameters that have { * ParametricNullness parametric nullness}. If a type parameter instead ranges over only non-null * types (or if the type is a non-variable type, like {@code String}), then code should almost * never use this method, preferring instead to call {@code requireNonNull} so as to benefit from * its runtime check. * *

An example use case for this method is in implementing an {@code Iterator} whose {@code * next} field is lazily initialized. The type of that field would be {@code @Nullable T}, and the * code would be responsible for populating a "real" {@code T} (which might still be the value * {@code null}!) before returning it to callers. Depending on how the code is structured, a * nullness analysis might not understand that the field has been populated. To avoid that problem * without having to add {@code @SuppressWarnings}, the code can call this method. * *

Why not just add {@code SuppressWarnings}? The problem is that this method is * typically useful for {@code return} statements. That leaves the code with two options: Either * add the suppression to the whole method (which turns off checking for a large section of code), * or extract a variable, and put the suppression on that. However, a local variable typically * doesn't work: Because nullness analyses typically infer the nullness of local variables, * there's no way to assign a {@code @Nullable T} to a field {@code T foo;} and instruct the * analysis that that means "plain {@code T}" rather than the inferred type {@code @Nullable T}. * (Even if supported added {@code @NonNull}, that would not help, since the problem case * addressed by this method is the case in which {@code T} has parametric nullness -- and thus its * value may be legitimately {@code null}.) */ @SuppressWarnings("nullness") static T uncheckedCastNullableTToT(T t) { return t; } private NullnessCasts() {} }