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Suppose I have a class A, with it's own instance variables. It has a method called doSomething(), which is a static method. Now, A adds another class B as some pointer. Say inside class B, I run some logic and determine that I need to run the code contained in doSomething(). Is it ok for me to just say A.doSomething()? And if I have an instance of A called a, does a's doSomething() method get invoked?

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    you are a mathematician aren't you?
    – AlexWien
    Feb 1, 2013 at 2:06
  • I'm sorry? What do you mean?
    – Jeeter
    Feb 1, 2013 at 2:06
  • I would suggest, just write down the code and put some print statements in the methods. Execute the code ad see what happens.
    – Arham
    Feb 1, 2013 at 2:07
  • what do you mean by "A adds another class B as some pointer" and "I have a class A, with it's own instance variables."?
    – vijay
    Feb 1, 2013 at 2:07
  • @vijay A runs some code that is contained in an instance of B. I'm sorry if that wasn't too clear
    – Jeeter
    Feb 1, 2013 at 2:09

4 Answers 4

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If you invoke A.doSomething() it will just execute that static method. Saying a's doSomething does not make sense because static methods do not belong to an object or instance of your class.

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Static methods don't belong to any particular instance. So when you call A.doSomething(), it doesn't matter if there are 0, 1, or a million instances of A. One method is called.

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the answer to your first question: "Is it ok for me to just say A.doSomething()?"
Yes it is. As pointed out by the other answers as well... doSomething() being static is a class method and hence does need the creating objects of A for its invocation.

the answer to your second question:"And if I have an instance of A called a, does a's doSomething() method get invoked?"
As a matter of fact it will, but it is similar to saying A.doSomething(). and hence, it makes no sense invoking it in that fashion. If anything, it will add to your confusion later when you read the code.

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While I question some of your terminology (I get the feeling you know what you're talking about, you just didn't say it perfectly), to answer your question, no because it can't. A static method is tied to a class. Calling a.staticMethod() is the same as A.staticMethod. Both do the exact same thing.

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