I have been at this for days. Our assignment requires that I override the equals()
and, more importantly, hashCode()
. Objects to be compared:
Two-dimensional int arrays.
Criteria of hashCode()
:
Visually, that would mean that if I had these two 2d arrays:
arr 1 arr2
[0, 0, 1] [1, 0, 0]
[1, 0, 0] [0, 0, 1]
[0, 0, 1] [1, 0, 0]
The two following print-statements would be identical, since arr2
is a reflection of arr1
.
System.out.println(arr1.hashCode());
System.out.println(arr2.hashCode());
Now, I am quite helpless in how to implement this. I figured I would have to do something like this (pseudo):
int hashCode() {
lastHash = listOfArrays.last().hashCode()
variants = this.getHashVariants()
foreach (variants as v)
if (lastHash == v) return v
return this.SystemGeneratedHash()
}
There is just so much that can and will go wrong with this approach, but I'm stumped and this was all I could think of. The idea of making the hashCode()
-function rely on an outside list feels really icky too. The lecture on the subject was abysmal, and search engines have not been in my favor as of yet.
Q: How can I make non-identical objects return the same hashCode as long as they match a certain requirement?
public int hashCode(){ return 0; }
meet your needs?