| Summary: | [inline] Inlining method with anonymous class in body gives compile error | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Product: | [Eclipse Project] JDT | Reporter: | Brian Miller <bmiller> |
| Component: | UI | Assignee: | Markus Keller <markus.kell.r> |
| Status: | CLOSED WONTFIX | QA Contact: | |
| Severity: | normal | ||
| Priority: | P3 | CC: | Brian.Miller |
| Version: | 3.2 | ||
| Target Milestone: | --- | ||
| Hardware: | PC | ||
| OS: | Windows XP | ||
| Whiteboard: | stalebug | ||
Simpler example (the static nested class is not necessary to reproduce):
class Bug {
void foo(){
new Runnable(){
public void run(){ }
};
}
}
class Other{
{
new Bug().foo();
}
}
Inling foo() gives:
class Bug {
}
class Other{
{
new Bug().new Runnable(){
public void run(){ }
};
}
}
The anonymous class creation should not get a target in this case.
This bug hasn't had any activity in quite some time. Maybe the problem got resolved, was a duplicate of something else, or became less pressing for some reason - or maybe it's still relevant but just hasn't been looked at yet. As such, we're closing this bug. If you have further information on the current state of the bug, please add it and reopen this bug. The information can be, for example, that the problem still occurs, that you still want the feature, that more information is needed, or that the bug is (for whatever reason) no longer relevant. -- The automated Eclipse Genie. |
Try to inline method foo(). -------------------- Bug.java ------------------------ class Bug { void foo(){ new Runnable(){ public void run(){bar();} }; } void bar(){} static class Other{ { new Bug().foo(); } } }