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Discontinuing use of the underscore
The underscore character (_) can no longer be used as a legal identifier name. Earlier attempts to remove the underscore in an identifier name were incomplete. The use of the underscore would generate a combination of errors and warnings. Since Java 9, the warnings are now errors. Consider the following sample code:
public class UnderscoreTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
int _ = 319;
if ( _ > 300 ) {
System.out.println("Your value us greater than 300.");
}
else {
System.out.println("Your value is not greater than 300.");
}
}
}
The preceding code, in Java 8, will result in compiler warnings for the int _ = 319; and if ( _ > 300) statements. The warning is: As of Java 9, '_' is a keyword, and may not be used as an identifier. So, in Java 9, 10 or 11, you are not able to use the underscore by itself as a legal identifier.
It is considered bad programming practice to use identifier names that are not self-descriptive. So, the use of the underscore character by itself as an identifier name should not be a problematic change.