InfoWorld: Java XML and JSON: Document processing for Java SE, Part 1: SAXON and Jackson
XML and JSON are important to me, and I’m grateful to Apress for letting me write an entire book about them. In this article I will briefly introduce the second edition of my new book, Java XML and ...
Java XML and JSON: Document processing for Java SE, Part 1: SAXON and Jackson
It is the Bitwise xor operator in java which results 1 for different value of bit (ie 1 ^ 0 = 1) and 0 for same value of bit (ie 0 ^ 0 = 0) when a number is written in binary form.
@ColinD Java really needn't to deal with backwards compatibility in each single line. In any Java source file using generics the old non-generic types should be forbidden (you can always use <?> if interfacing to legacy code) and the useless diamond operator should not exist.
In particular, if Java ever gets another ternary operator, people who use the term "conditional operator" will still be correct and unambiguous - unlike those who just say "ternary operator".
What is the Java ?: operator called and what does it do?
The parenteses I used above are implicitly used by Java. If you look at the terms this way you can easily see, that they are both the same as they are commutative.
Details: Java 6, Apache Commons Collection, IntelliJ 12 Update/Answer: It turns out that IntelliJ 12 supports Java 8, which supports lambdas, and is "folding" Predicates and displaying them as lambdas. Below is the "un-folded" code.