This is because you can pass an Object
or a String
. Since null
can fit in both, the compiler doesn't know which method to use, leading to compile error.
Methods definitions:
Instead, if you provide an Object
or a String
variable (even if it has null
value), the compiler would know which method to use.
EDIT: This is better explained in this answer. As to the internal link pointing to the Java specification, you can read it here, and this case would suit here:
The informal intuition is that one method is more specific than another **if any invocation handled by the first method could be passed on to the other one without a compile-time type error.
It is possible that no method is the most specific, because there are two or more methods that are maximally specific.
null
makes it so that the program treats it as nothing while passing anull
through a reference works since it's basically showing that the variable itself has no value.