I know I can use the comma operator like this
for (int i = 1, j = 15; j>10; i++, j--) {
// do something neat
}
but some articles see
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/specs/jls/se7/html/jls-15.html#jls-15.27
15.27. Expression
<...>
Unlike C and C++, the Java programming language has no comma operator.
What's wrong?
Some of the tricks which work in C don't work in Java.
Was the comma operator a part of an older specification which later changed?
This never worked in Java AFAIK.
Are the people that wrote those examples using a different Java setup that allows this?
Its a common mistake to assume Java is just like C or C++ because it is similar. A good portion of coding mistakes on SO are due to people trying to write C++ in Java and getting confused when it doesn't do what they expect.
BTW: I have made the same mistake assuming C++ is just like Java as my knowledge of C++ is not current.
However some tricks which working Java but perhaps not C.
You can use all currency symbols or which there are a few which look at most the same.
e.g.
if( ⁀ ‿ ⁀ == ⁀ ⁔ ⁀ || ¢ + ¢== ₡)
You can use character which are invisible and c couple which reverse the order the rest of the line when printed. ;)
This program compiles and runs and prints all the odd characters you can use in Java identifiers
for (char ch = 0; ch < Character.MAX_VALUE; ch++)
if (Character.isJavaIdentifierPart(ch) && !Character.isJavaIdentifierStart(ch))
System.out.printf("%04x <%s>%n", (int) ch, "" + ch);
which makes its almost too easy.
http://vanillajava.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/uses-for-special-characters-in-java-code.html
http://vanillajava.blogspot.co.uk/2012/09/hidden-code.html