15

Something that's confused me - an example:

Thing.java:

import java.util.Date; 

class Thing { 
    static Date getDate() {return new Date();}
}

(same package) TestUsesThing.java:

// not importing Date here.

public class TestUsesThing {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println(Thing.getDate().getTime()); // okay
        // Date date = new Date(); // naturally this wouldn't be okay
    }

}

Why is it not necessary to import Date to be able to call getTime() on one of them?

0

5 Answers 5

27

Importing in Java is only necessary so the compiler knows what a Date is if you type

Date date = new Date();

Importing is not like #include in C/C++; all types on the classpath are available, but you import them just to keep from having to write the fully qualified name. And in this case, it's unnecessary.

5
  • +1: I'm learning Java myself and of all the material I've read, I don't recall seeing that tidbit of information explained that way. That clears up alot. Thanks. Apr 24, 2009 at 13:50
  • 1
    The other somewhat related comment is that all of the java.lang package is automatically imported. So that means that you can use things like System without an import statement.
    – Jay R.
    Apr 24, 2009 at 16:44
  • This is very true. With other words, it's not about where is it?, but rather which is it?
    – MC Emperor
    Apr 21, 2020 at 14:18
  • I created package1 and package2. package2 has Person and ReturnPerson class. ReturnPerson.returnPerson() method returns Person instance. Person has print() method which prints dummy message. In package1.Test class I import ReturnPerson and in package1.Test.main(), I do new ReturnPerson.returnPerson.print(). It is giving me The method print() from the type Person2 is not visible error? Why so?
    – MsA
    Apr 21, 2020 at 18:33
  • @anir: That's a different issue. If the method is not visible, that doesn't mean the compiler is not aware of it. It means that the method can't be called from the place you are calling it. For instance, a private method can't be called outside the class. And a method that is not marked public or private, hence is package-private, can't be called from a different package.
    – Michael Myers
    Apr 21, 2020 at 22:01
1

Good question !!

I think the result is the difference between how java compiler handles expressions vs statements.

Date d = new Date(); // a statement

where as

new Thing().getDate().getTime()

is an expression as it occurs inside println method call. When you call getDate on new Thing() the compiler tries to handle the expression by looking at the type info for Thing class, which is where it gets the declaration of type Date. But when you try to use Date separately in a statement like

Date d = new Thing().getDate();

you are assigning the result to a type in the current scope (class TestUsesThing ), compiler tries to resolve the type within that scope. As a result, you see the compiler error for unknown type.

0

Are Thing and TestUsesThing in the same package? If so then you don't have to import Thing. The reason you have to import Date is because it's in a different package.

1
  • Yes, sorry, the question was indeed about the Date import, not the relationship between the classes which I have clarified now.
    – jjujuma
    Apr 24, 2009 at 14:22
0

import statements are used for couple of things.

  1. Compiler type checking and avoid naming collision.
  2. Ensures byte code linkage

Whenever we say

System.out.println( new Thing().getDate().getTime() )

The compiler parses this statement left to right and gets into that class.

First level compiler parsing.

  1. Go to thing class
  2. compile doesn't have any linkage or ClassVersion error from Thing.class

  3. Check Thing.class has getDate method.
  4. if #3 is good then compiler pointer is still in Thing.class (which has date import statements) and I could invoke Time method.
  5. As a consumer TestUsesThing gets only long variable.

    System.out.println( new Thing().getDate() )
    

    5.1 In this case we are implicitly accessing .toString() method

0

Actually, that was an ideal example, since there's two different standard Java Date classes: java.util.Date and java.sql.Date.

How does it know which one to use? Simple. The getDate() method is declared as part of the definition of the Thing class, and part of that declaration is its returntype:

public java.util.Date getDate() {
  return this.date;
}

Of course, if you have an import in the definition of the Thing class - and it's not ambiguous, you simply say:

public Date getDate() {

If you were to decode the binary of the Thing class, you'd see the method signature of the getDate method, and it includes the fully-qualified class name (including package) of the return type.

An import is simply a way of telling the compiler what package(s) you want to assume when referring to classes without explicit qualifications. The list of imports will be scanned whenever an unqualified class name is seen, and the packages will be searched. If there's no ambiguity (such as importing both java.util.date and java.sql.Date), that class will be used. If you can determine the class implicitly, or if the class name is fully qualified, you don't need to import.

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