As the article and the book (Java Concurrency In Practice) both point out - the
motivation for using DCL (to overcome slow speed) is less of an issue (or a
non-issue) with newer JVMs.
I am not a Java expert. But enough Java experts have stressed the need to
eliminate this anti-pattern that I
Thanks Adrian,
Are they examples from the books or your own?
Jacques
From: Adrian Crum adrian.c...@yahoo.com
As the article and the book (Java Concurrency In Practice) both point out - the motivation for using DCL (to overcome slow speed)
is less of an issue (or a non-issue) with newer JVMs.
The static field example is from the book.
-Adrian
--- On Sat, 7/3/10, Jacques Le Roux jacques.le.r...@les7arts.com wrote:
Thanks Adrian,
Are they examples from the books or your own?
Jacques
From: Adrian Crum adrian.c...@yahoo.com
As the article and the book (Java Concurrency In
Adrian Crum wrote:
As the article and the book (Java Concurrency In Practice) both point out -
the motivation for using DCL (to overcome slow speed) is less of an issue (or
a non-issue) with newer JVMs.
I am not a Java expert. But enough Java experts have stressed the need to
eliminate
--- On Sat, 7/3/10, Adam Heath doo...@brainfood.com wrote:
Adrian Crum wrote:
As the article and the book (Java Concurrency In
Practice) both point out - the motivation for using DCL (to
overcome slow speed) is less of an issue (or a non-issue)
with newer JVMs.
I am not a Java expert.