Java: valueOf vs copyValueOf
As others have pointed out:
- The two methods are equivalent.
- The javadocs clearly state that the two methods are equivalent. And
copyValueOf
clearly points the reader to the (mildly) preferredvalueOf
method. - There is NO performance difference between the two versions. The implementations are identical.
- Deprecating one or other method would be counter-productive because it would prompt people to "fix" code that isn't broken. That is (arguably) a waste of time, and it would annoy a lot of people.
- Removing one or other method would break backwards compatibility ... for no good reason. That would really annoy a lot of people.
The only other issue is why there isn't an annotation to flag a method as "out of date". I think that the answer to that is that it doesn't matter if you use an API method that is out of date. Certainly, it doesn't matter enough for the Java team to implement such a mechanism ... and then spend a lot of time deciding whether such-and-such an API is "out of date enough" to warrant flagging, etc.
(Most folks would not want the Java team to waste their time on such things. We would prefer them to spend their time on delivering improvements to Java that will make a real difference to program performance and programmer productivity.)
A more appropriate way to deal with this issue would for someone to write or enhance 3rd-party a style checker or bug checker tool to flag use of (so-called) out of date methods. This is clearly not Oracle's problem, but if you (Dear Reader) are really concerned about this, you could make it your problem.