The Closeable interface was introduced in Java 5 whereas the AutoCloseable interface came in Java 7 together with the try-with-resources statement. Closeable extends (since Java 7) the Autocloseableinterface.
In the book OCA/OCP Java SE 7 - Programmer I & II Study Guide it says on page 399:
What happends if we call the
close()multiple time? It depends. For classes that implementAutoCloseable, the implementation is required to be idempotent. Which means you can callclose()all day and nothing will happen the second time and beyond. [...] For classes that implementCloseable, there is no such guarantee.
So according to this text, implementations of AutoCloseable need to be idempotent, and those of Closeable not. Now when I have a look at the documentation of the AutoCloseable interface at docs.oracle.com, it says:
Note that unlike the
closemethod ofCloseable, this close method is not required to be idempotent. In other words, calling thisclosemethod more than once may have some visible side effect, unlikeCloseable.closewhich is required to have no effect if called more than once.
Now this is the opposite of what is written in the book. I have two questions:
(1) What is correct? The doc at docs.oracle.com or the book? Which of the two interfaces requires idempotence?
(2) No matter which one needs to be idempotent - am I right that Java has actually no way at all to ensure that it is idempotent? If so, the "requirement" of the close method to be idempotent is something that the programmer should do, but I can never be sure that someone who used the interface actually did do it, right? In this case the idempotence is merely a suggestion of oracle, correct?