@@ -220,6 +220,7 @@ example for Spring bean or Spring Web Flow definitions. In this case, the parser
220
220
evaluation context, root object and any predefined variables are all set up implicitly,
221
221
requiring the user to specify nothing other than the expressions.
222
222
====
223
+
223
224
As a final introductory example, the use of a boolean operator is shown using the
224
225
Inventor object in the previous example.
225
226
@@ -583,12 +584,13 @@ Autowired methods and constructors can also use the `@Value` annotation.
583
584
584
585
[[expressions-ref-literal]]
585
586
=== Literal expressions
586
- The types of literal expressions supported are strings, dates, numeric values (int,
587
- real, and hex), boolean and null. Strings are delimited by single quotes. To put a
588
- single quote itself in a string use two single quote characters. The following listing
589
- shows simple usage of literals. Typically they would not be used in isolation like this,
590
- but as part of a more complex expression, for example using a literal on one side of a
591
- logical comparison operator.
587
+ The types of literal expressions supported are strings, numeric values (int, real, hex),
588
+ boolean and null. Strings are delimited by single quotes. To put a single quote itself
589
+ in a string, use two single quote characters.
590
+
591
+ The following listing shows simple usage of literals. Typically they would not be used
592
+ in isolation like this but rather as part of a more complex expression, for example
593
+ using a literal on one side of a logical comparison operator.
592
594
593
595
[source,java,indent=0]
594
596
[subs="verbatim,quotes"]
@@ -777,6 +779,17 @@ and greater than or equal are supported using standard operator notation.
777
779
boolean trueValue = parser.parseExpression("'black' < 'block'").getValue(Boolean.class);
778
780
----
779
781
782
+ [NOTE]
783
+ ====
784
+ Greater/less-than comparisons against `null` follow a simple rule: `null` is treated as
785
+ nothing here (i.e. NOT as zero). As a consequence, any other value is always greater
786
+ than `null` (`X > null` is always `true`) and no other value is ever less than nothing
787
+ (`X < null` is always `false`).
788
+
789
+ If you prefer numeric comparisons instead, please avoid number-based `null` comparisons
790
+ in favor of comparisons against zero (e.g. `X > 0` or `X < 0`).
791
+ ====
792
+
780
793
In addition to standard relational operators SpEL supports the `instanceof` and regular
781
794
expression based `matches` operator.
782
795
0 commit comments