Java 8 optional: ifPresent return object orElseThrow exception

I'm trying to make something like this:

 private String getStringIfObjectIsPresent(Optional<Object> object){
        object.ifPresent(() ->{
            String result = "result";
            //some logic with result and return it
            return result;
        }).orElseThrow(MyCustomException::new);
    }

This won't work, because ifPresent takes Consumer functional interface as parameter, which has void accept(T t). It cannot return any value. Is there any other way to do it ?


Actually what you are searching is: Optional.map. Your code would then look like:

object.map(o -> "result" /* or your function */)
      .orElseThrow(MyCustomException::new);

I would rather omit passing the Optional if you can. In the end you gain nothing using an Optional here. A slightly other variant:

public String getString(Object yourObject) {
  if (Objects.isNull(yourObject)) { // or use requireNonNull instead if NullPointerException suffices
     throw new MyCustomException();
  }
  String result = ...
  // your string mapping function
  return result;
}

If you already have the Optional-object due to another call, I would still recommend you to use the map-method, instead of isPresent, etc. for the single reason, that I find it more readable (clearly a subjective decision ;-)).


Two options here:

Replace ifPresent with map and use Function instead of Consumer

private String getStringIfObjectIsPresent(Optional<Object> object) {
    return object
            .map(obj -> {
                String result = "result";
                //some logic with result and return it
                return result;
            })
            .orElseThrow(MyCustomException::new);
}

Use isPresent:

private String getStringIfObjectIsPresent(Optional<Object> object) {
    if (object.isPresent()) {
        String result = "result";
        //some logic with result and return it
        return result;
    } else {
        throw new MyCustomException();
    }
}

Use the map-function instead. It transforms the value inside the optional.

Like this:

private String getStringIfObjectIsPresent(Optional<Object> object) {
    return object.map(() -> {
        String result = "result";
        //some logic with result and return it
        return result;
    }).orElseThrow(MyCustomException::new);
}