2

is it possible to declare 2 array lists in the same line? e.g:

List<String> mm= new ArrayList<String>();
List<String> kk= new ArrayList<String>();

Is it then possible to do something like:

List<String> mm,kk= new ArrayList<String>();

Obviously, I get a compile error when I do the above, and was wondering how could one declare 2 lists in the same line.

2
  • Your example compiles fine, but it only initializes kk. Dec 25, 2011 at 21:11
  • 1
    If I were a tester or a developer looking at your code for where kk was defined, I would find your first example cleaner and easier to follow. Dec 25, 2011 at 21:21

4 Answers 4

9

If you want that, you should do:

List<String> list_1 = new ArrayList<String>(), list_2 = new ArrayList<String>();
2
  • James, please don't forget to click the green tick mark next to the answer :).
    – Kos
    Dec 25, 2011 at 21:13
  • 1
    @JamesW: That's bad coding style, I wouldn't use this.
    – Kai
    Dec 25, 2011 at 23:22
7

Short answer: yes, you can declare 2 variables in the same expression. List<String> mm,kk; is declaring two lists.

Note that the operation kk = new ArrayList<String>(); is not a declaration, it is an assigment.

0

You can declare them in the same line, but you cannot initialize them. So

List<String> mm,kk;

is possible but then you still have to initialize them

mm = new ArrayList<String>();
kk = new ArrayList<String>();
0

What @fge wrote is the correct way. However make sure you don't initialize them in a single line like:

mm = kk = new ArrayList<String>();

as this would lead to both the lists pointing to the same arraylist object and would mess up both the lists.

This single line initialization can be done for primitive data types but not for reference data types.

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