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I have been trying to learn design patterns. This site uses the synchronized keyword, but I don't understand what it does.

I searched on the net and found that it is somewhat related to multi-threading and memory, but I am a mechanical engineer and don't understand what that means.

Can anybody please help me understand threads and the synchronized keyword?

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    synchronized is java specific keyword. Oct 21, 2011 at 11:02
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    The code in the link is not C++.
    – Skizz
    Oct 21, 2011 at 11:02
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    The first point is that the code samples you've linked to are Java not C++. Oct 21, 2011 at 11:03

3 Answers 3

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There is no synchronized keyword in C++.

There is one in Java, though, where for methods it means the following two things:

  • It is not possible for two invocations of synchronized methods on the same object to interleave. When one thread is executing a synchronized method for an object, all other threads that invoke synchronized methods for the same object block (suspend execution) until the first thread is done with the object.
  • When a synchronized method exits, it automatically establishes a happens-before relationship with any subsequent invocation of a synchronized method for the same object. This guarantees that changes to the state of the object are visible to all threads.

Similar rules apply to arbitrary blocks.

Also, I recommend learning from a peer-reviewed book, not some arbitrary non-authoritative website.

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In the (Java) example

public static synchronized Singleton getInstance()

means that only one thread at a time should be able to access the getInstance() method this to avoid a racing condition.

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As the commenters already pointed out, synchronized is a Java keyword.

It means that two threads cannot execute the method at the same time and the JVM takes care of enforcing that.

In C++, you will have to use some synchronization construct, like a critical section or a mutex. You can consult this.

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