926

Consider the code below:

DummyBean dum = new DummyBean();
dum.setDummy("foo");
System.out.println(dum.getDummy()); // prints 'foo'

DummyBean dumtwo = dum;
System.out.println(dumtwo.getDummy()); // prints 'foo'

dum.setDummy("bar");
System.out.println(dumtwo.getDummy()); // prints 'bar' but it should print 'foo'

So, I want to copy the dum to dumtwo and change dum without affecting the dumtwo. But the code above is not doing that. When I change something in dum, the same change is happening in dumtwo also.

I guess, when I say dumtwo = dum, Java copies the reference only. So, is there any way to create a fresh copy of dum and assign it to dumtwo?

0

23 Answers 23

704

Create a copy constructor:

class DummyBean {
  private String dummy;

  public DummyBean(DummyBean another) {
    this.dummy = another.dummy; // you can access  
  }
}

Every object has also a clone method which can be used to copy the object, but don't use it. It's way too easy to create a class and do improper clone method. If you are going to do that, read at least what Joshua Bloch has to say about it in Effective Java.

16
  • 46
    But then he'd have to change his code to DummyBean two = new DummyBean(one); Right?
    – Chris K
    May 17, 2010 at 17:43
  • 13
    Does this method effectively accomplish the same thing as a deep copy? Jul 13, 2011 at 18:46
  • 140
    @MatthewPiziak, to me - this would not be a deep clone since any nested objects would still be referencing the original source instance, not a duplicate unless each reference (non-value type) object supplies the same constructor template as above. Nov 20, 2011 at 11:33
  • 18
    @Timmmm: Yes, they will reference the same String but because it is immutable, it is ok. Same goes for primitives. For non-primitives, you would just do copy contructor call recursively. e.g. If DummyBean referenced FooBar then FooBar should have contructor FooBar(FooBar another), and dummy should call this.foobar = new FooBar(another.foobar)
    – egaga
    Feb 3, 2012 at 18:02
  • 7
    @ChristianVielma: No, it won't be "johndoe". Like Timmmm said, the string itself is immutable. With one, setDummy(..) you set the reference in one to point to "johndoe", but not the one in one.
    – keuleJ
    Jun 28, 2012 at 16:26
457

Basic: Object Copying in Java.

Let us Assume an object- obj1, that contains two objects, containedObj1 and containedObj2.
enter image description here

shallow copying:
shallow copying creates a new instance of the same class and copies all the fields to the new instance and returns it. Object class provides a clone method and provides support for the shallow copying.
enter image description here

Deep copying:
A deep copy occurs when an object is copied along with the objects to which it refers. Below image shows obj1 after a deep copy has been performed on it. Not only has obj1 been copied, but the objects contained within it have been copied as well. We can use Java Object Serialization to make a deep copy. Unfortunately, this approach has some problems too(detailed examples).
enter image description here

Possible Problems:
clone is tricky to implement correctly.
It's better to use Defensive copying, copy constructors(as @egaga reply) or static factory methods.

  1. If you have an object, that you know has a public clone() method, but you don’t know the type of the object at compile time, then you have problem. Java has an interface called Cloneable. In practice, we should implement this interface if we want to make an object Cloneable. Object.clone is protected, so we must override it with a public method in order for it to be accessible.
  2. Another problem arises when we try deep copying of a complex object. Assume that the clone() method of all member object variables also does deep copy, this is too risky of an assumption. You must control the code in all classes.

For example org.apache.commons.lang.SerializationUtils will have method for Deep clone using serialization(Source). If we need to clone Bean then there are couple of utility methods in org.apache.commons.beanutils (Source).

  • cloneBean will Clone a bean based on the available property getters and setters, even if the bean class itself does not implement Cloneable.
  • copyProperties will Copy property values from the origin bean to the destination bean for all cases where the property names are the same.
5
  • 1
    Can you please explain what is object contained within another?
    – Freakyuser
    Jun 13, 2013 at 6:49
  • 1
    @Chandra Sekhar "shallow copying creates a new instance of the same class and copies all the fields to the new instance and returns it" that's wrong to mention all the fields,bcz objects don't get copied only the references get copied which points to the same object that old one(original) was pointing to.
    – JAVA
    Oct 29, 2013 at 11:49
  • 4
    @sunny - Chandra's description is correct. And so is your description of what happens; I am saying that you have an incorrect understanding of the meaning of "copies all the fields". The field is the reference, it is not the object being referred to. "copying all fields" means "copying all those references". It is good that you pointed out what exactly this means, for anyone else who has the same mis-interpretation as you, of the statement "copying all fields". :) Aug 25, 2014 at 22:41
  • 2
    ... if we think in terms of some lower-level OO language, with "pointers" to objects, such a field would contain the address in memory (such as "0x70FF1234") at which the object data is found. That address is the "field value" that is being copied (assigned). You are correct that the end result is that both objects have fields that refer to (point at) the same object. Aug 25, 2014 at 22:47
  • baeldung.com/java-deep-copy Oct 27, 2022 at 19:48
166

In the package import org.apache.commons.lang.SerializationUtils; there is a method:

SerializationUtils.clone(Object);

Example:

this.myObjectCloned = SerializationUtils.clone(this.object);
6
  • 84
    As long as the object implements Serializable Jun 20, 2013 at 18:02
  • 2
    In this case cloned object has no reference to the original, if the last one is static.
    – Dante
    Apr 19, 2016 at 12:26
  • 12
    A third party library just to clone object!
    – User
    Apr 18, 2017 at 12:51
  • 8
    @Khan, "a third party library just to" is an entirely separate discussion! :D May 16, 2018 at 21:34
  • I get java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError on Android 4, 5 and 6: Fatal Exception: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError org.apache.commons.lang3.-$$Lambda$Validate$0cAgQbsjQIo0VHKh79UWkAcDRWk
    – Mikhail
    Aug 29, 2020 at 8:02
113

Just follow as below:

public class Deletable implements Cloneable{

    private String str;
    public Deletable(){
    }
    public void setStr(String str){
        this.str = str;
    }
    public void display(){
        System.out.println("The String is "+str);
    }
    protected Object clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
        return super.clone();
    }
}

and wherever you want to get another object, simple perform cloning. e.g:

Deletable del = new Deletable();
Deletable delTemp = (Deletable ) del.clone(); // this line will return you an independent
                                 // object, the changes made to this object will
                                 // not be reflected to other object
7
  • 2
    Did you test this? I could use this for my project and it is important to be correct.
    – misty
    Aug 24, 2016 at 21:37
  • 3
    @misty I've tested it. Works perfectly on my production app Sep 27, 2016 at 11:37
  • 2
    After cloning, when you modify the original object, it is modifying the clone as well.
    – Sibish
    Aug 30, 2017 at 23:58
  • 12
    This is wrong in that it is not a deep copy which was asked for.
    – Bluehorn
    Nov 6, 2017 at 12:10
  • 2
    This method clone the pointer which points for the cloneable object, but all the properties inside both objects are the same, So there is a new object created in the memory, but the data inside each object is the same data from memory Feb 14, 2018 at 12:49
47

Why is there no answer for using Reflection API?

private static Object cloneObject(Object obj){
        try{
            Object clone = obj.getClass().newInstance();
            for (Field field : obj.getClass().getDeclaredFields()) {
                field.setAccessible(true);
                field.set(clone, field.get(obj));
            }
            return clone;
        }catch(Exception e){
            return null;
        }
    }

It's really simple.

EDIT: Include child object via recursion

private static Object cloneObject(Object obj){
        try{
            Object clone = obj.getClass().newInstance();
            for (Field field : obj.getClass().getDeclaredFields()) {
                field.setAccessible(true);
                if(field.get(obj) == null || Modifier.isFinal(field.getModifiers())){
                    continue;
                }
                if(field.getType().isPrimitive() || field.getType().equals(String.class)
                        || field.getType().getSuperclass().equals(Number.class)
                        || field.getType().equals(Boolean.class)){
                    field.set(clone, field.get(obj));
                }else{
                    Object childObj = field.get(obj);
                    if(childObj == obj){
                        field.set(clone, clone);
                    }else{
                        field.set(clone, cloneObject(field.get(obj)));
                    }
                }
            }
            return clone;
        }catch(Exception e){
            return null;
        }
    }
9
  • This looks much better, but you only need to consider final fields as setAccessible(true) might fail, so maybe u need to separately handle the exception IllegalAccessException thrown when calling field.set(clone, field.get(obj)) separately.
    – Max
    Aug 21, 2014 at 9:12
  • 1
    I liked it so much but can you refactor it to use generics ? private static <T> T cloneObject(T obj) { .... }
    – Adelin
    Feb 8, 2016 at 14:52
  • 2
    I think it's issue when we have reference from properties to it parents: Class A { B child; } Class B{ A parent; }
    – nhthai
    Feb 16, 2016 at 10:25
  • It fails even int this situation, need to be handled, i will play with it tomorow. class car { car car = new car(); } Sep 16, 2016 at 21:40
  • 3
    This is error prone. Not sure how will it handle collections
    – ACV
    Jun 27, 2017 at 16:26
34

I use Google's JSON library to serialize it then create a new instance of the serialized object. It does deep copy with a few restrictions:

  • there can't be any recursive references

  • it won't copy arrays of disparate types

  • arrays and lists should be typed or it won't find the class to instantiate

  • you may need to encapsulate strings in a class you declare yourself

I also use this class to save user preferences, windows and whatnot to be reloaded at runtime. It is very easy to use and effective.

import com.google.gson.*;

public class SerialUtils {

//___________________________________________________________________________________

public static String serializeObject(Object o) {
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    String serializedObject = gson.toJson(o);
    return serializedObject;
}
//___________________________________________________________________________________

public static Object unserializeObject(String s, Object o){
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    Object object = gson.fromJson(s, o.getClass());
    return object;
}
       //___________________________________________________________________________________
public static Object cloneObject(Object o){
    String s = serializeObject(o);
    Object object = unserializeObject(s,o);
    return object;
}
}
1
  • 1
    This works great. But watch out if you try to clone something like List<Integer>. It will be buggy, my Integers got turned into Doubles, 100.0. It took me a long while to understand why are they like that. The solution was to clone Integers them one by one and add to the list in a cycle.
    – paakjis
    Oct 25, 2019 at 8:02
24

Yes, you are just making a reference to the object. You can clone the object if it implements Cloneable.

Check out this wiki article about copying objects.

Refer here: Object copying

18

Add Cloneable and below code to your class

public Object clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
        return super.clone();
    }

Use this clonedObject = (YourClass) yourClassObject.clone();

18

Deep Cloning is your answer, which requires implementing the Cloneable interface and overriding the clone() method.

public class DummyBean implements Cloneable {

   private String dummy;

   public void setDummy(String dummy) {
      this.dummy = dummy;
   }

   public String getDummy() {
      return dummy;
   }

   @Override
   public Object clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
      DummyBean cloned = (DummyBean)super.clone();
      cloned.setDummy(cloned.getDummy());
      // the above is applicable in case of primitive member types like String 
      // however, in case of non primitive types
      // cloned.setNonPrimitiveType(cloned.getNonPrimitiveType().clone());
      return cloned;
   }
}

You will call it like this DummyBean dumtwo = dum.clone();

1
  • 4
    dummy, a String, is immutable, you don't need to copy it
    – Steve Kuo
    Apr 2, 2015 at 16:28
13

This works too. Assuming model

class UserAccount{
   public int id;
   public String name;
}

First add compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.8.1' to your app>gradle & sync. Then

Gson gson = new Gson();
updateUser = gson.fromJson(gson.toJson(mUser),UserAccount.class);

You can exclude using a field by using transient keyword after access modifier.

Note: This is bad practice. Also don't recommend to use Cloneable or JavaSerialization It's slow and broken. Write copy constructor for best performance ref.

Something like

class UserAccount{
        public int id;
        public String name;
        //empty constructor
        public UserAccount(){}
        //parameterize constructor
        public UserAccount(int id, String name) {
            this.id = id;
            this.name = name;
        }

        //copy constructor
        public UserAccount(UserAccount in){
            this(in.id,in.name);
        }
    }

Test stats of 90000 iteration:
Line UserAccount clone = gson.fromJson(gson.toJson(aO), UserAccount.class); takes 808ms

Line UserAccount clone = new UserAccount(aO); takes less than 1ms

Conclusion: Use gson if your boss is crazy and you prefer speed. Use second copy constructor if you prefer quality.

You can also use copy constructor code generator plugin in Android Studio.

2
  • Why did you suggest it if it's bad practice? Sep 22, 2017 at 16:59
  • Thanks @ParthMehrotra now improved
    – Qamar
    Sep 23, 2017 at 5:57
10

Here's a decent explanation of clone() if you end up needing it...

Here: clone (Java method)

10

Use a deep cloning utility:

SomeObjectType copy = new Cloner().deepClone(someObject);

This will deep copy any java object, check it out at https://github.com/kostaskougios/cloning

1
  • 1
    didn't work for me using a custom class. getting the following exception: java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: sun.reflect.ReflectionFactory Jun 13, 2012 at 15:28
10

Alternative to egaga's constructor method of copy. You probably already have a POJO, so just add another method copy() which returns a copy of the initialized object.

class DummyBean {
    private String dummyStr;
    private int dummyInt;

    public DummyBean(String dummyStr, int dummyInt) {
        this.dummyStr = dummyStr;
        this.dummyInt = dummyInt;
    }

    public DummyBean copy() {
        return new DummyBean(dummyStr, dummyInt);
    }

    //... Getters & Setters
}

If you already have a DummyBean and want a copy:

DummyBean bean1 = new DummyBean("peet", 2);
DummyBean bean2 = bean1.copy(); // <-- Create copy of bean1 

System.out.println("bean1: " + bean1.getDummyStr() + " " + bean1.getDummyInt());
System.out.println("bean2: " + bean2.getDummyStr() + " " + bean2.getDummyInt());

//Change bean1
bean1.setDummyStr("koos");
bean1.setDummyInt(88);

System.out.println("bean1: " + bean1.getDummyStr() + " " + bean1.getDummyInt());
System.out.println("bean2: " + bean2.getDummyStr() + " " + bean2.getDummyInt());

Output:

bean1: peet 2
bean2: peet 2

bean1: koos 88
bean2: peet 2

But both works well, it is ultimately up to you...

8

Use gson for duplicating an object.

public static <T>T copyObject(Object object){
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    JsonObject jsonObject = gson.toJsonTree(object).getAsJsonObject();
    return gson.fromJson(jsonObject,(Type) object.getClass());
}

Assume I have an object person.So

Person copyPerson = copyObject(person);

Note: The performance is much slower.

1
  • 1
    Thats a Good idea!
    – javad
    Aug 28, 2021 at 9:38
7

To do that you have to clone the object in some way. Although Java has a cloning mechanism, don't use it if you don't have to. Create a copy method that does the copy work for you, and then do:

dumtwo = dum.copy();

Here is some more advice on different techniques for accomplishing a copy.

7

Pass the object that you want to copy and get the object you want:

private Object copyObject(Object objSource) {
        try {
            ByteArrayOutputStream bos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
            ObjectOutputStream oos = new ObjectOutputStream(bos);
            oos.writeObject(objSource);
            oos.flush();
            oos.close();
            bos.close();
            byte[] byteData = bos.toByteArray();
            ByteArrayInputStream bais = new ByteArrayInputStream(byteData);
            try {
                objDest = new ObjectInputStream(bais).readObject();
            } catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        return objDest;

    }

Now parse the objDest to desired object.

Happy Coding!

1
  • A good solution to have a solution. But if the purpose of cloning is to improve performance, this solution is not working because it has a heavy processesing Apr 23, 2023 at 2:59
6

Other than explicitly copying, another approach is to make the object immutable (no set or other mutator methods). In this way the question never arises. Immutability becomes more difficult with larger objects, but that other side of that is that it pushes you in the direction of splitting into coherent small objects and composites.

4
class DB {
  private String dummy;

  public DB(DB one) {
    this.dummy = one.dummy; 
  }
}
3

You can deep copy automatically with XStream, from http://x-stream.github.io/:

XStream is a simple library to serialize objects to XML and back again.

Add it to your project (if using maven)

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.thoughtworks.xstream</groupId>
    <artifactId>xstream</artifactId>
    <version>1.3.1</version>                
</dependency>

Then

DummyBean dum = new DummyBean();
dum.setDummy("foo");
DummyBean dumCopy = (DummyBean) XSTREAM.fromXML(XSTREAM.toXML(dum));

With this you have a copy without the need to implement any cloning interface.

4
  • 31
    Converting to/from XML doesn't seem very ... elegant. To put it mildly!
    – Timmmm
    Jan 27, 2012 at 13:20
  • Take a look to java.beans.XMLEncoder for a standard Java API that serializes to XML too (although not precisely for deep copy purposes). Aug 11, 2015 at 18:35
  • 3
    do you realize how heavy this is ?
    – mahieddine
    Apr 25, 2016 at 19:47
  • 1
    Way to much overhead in my opinion, since you need to add a 3rd party library and do object serialization which most likely has a huge performance impact.
    – NiThDi
    Nov 22, 2016 at 14:27
3
public class MyClass implements Cloneable {

private boolean myField= false;
// and other fields or objects

public MyClass (){}

@Override
public MyClass clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
   try
   {
       MyClass clonedMyClass = (MyClass)super.clone();
       // if you have custom object, then you need create a new one in here
       return clonedMyClass ;
   } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) {
       e.printStackTrace();
       return new MyClass();
   }

  }
}

and in your code:

MyClass myClass = new MyClass();
// do some work with this object
MyClass clonedMyClass = myClass.clone();
1
  • 3
    There is no point in set "throws CloneNotSupportedException" in the declaration if you try catch the exception and is not thrown up. So, you can just remove it.
    – Christian
    Jun 25, 2018 at 11:08
1

You can try to implement Cloneable and use the clone() method; however, if you use the clone method you should - by standard - ALWAYS override Object's public Object clone() method.

1

If you can add an annotation to the source file, an annotation processor or code generator like this one can be used.

import net.zerobuilder.BeanBuilder

@BeanBuilder
public class DummyBean { 
  // bean stuff
}

A class DummyBeanBuilders will be generates, which has a static method dummyBeanUpdater to create shallow copies, the same way as you would do it manually.

DummyBean bean = new DummyBean();
// Call some setters ...
// Now make a copy
DummyBean copy = DummyBeanBuilders.dummyBeanUpdater(bean).done();
1

Using Kotlin extension function

fun <T : Any?> T.duplicate(): T? {
    var copyObject: T? = null
    try {
        val byteArrayOutputStream = ByteArrayOutputStream()
        val objectOutputStream = ObjectOutputStream(byteArrayOutputStream)
        objectOutputStream.writeObject(this)
        objectOutputStream.flush()
        objectOutputStream.close()
        byteArrayOutputStream.close()
        val byteData = byteArrayOutputStream.toByteArray()
        val byteArrayInputStream = ByteArrayInputStream(byteData)
        try {
            copyObject = ObjectInputStream(byteArrayInputStream).readObject() as T
        } catch (e: ClassNotFoundException) {
            e.printStackTrace()
        }
    } catch (e: IOException) {
        e.printStackTrace()
    }
    return copyObject
}

Use case

var object = Any()
var duplicateObject = object.duplicate()

Java

<T extends Object> T copyObject(T sourceObject) {

    T copyObject = null;

    try {
        ByteArrayOutputStream byteArrayOutputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
        ObjectOutputStream objectOutputStream = new ObjectOutputStream(byteArrayOutputStream);
        objectOutputStream.writeObject(sourceObject);
        objectOutputStream.flush();
        objectOutputStream.close();
        byteArrayOutputStream.close();
        byte[] byteData = byteArrayOutputStream.toByteArray();
        ByteArrayInputStream byteArrayInputStream = new ByteArrayInputStream(byteData);
        try {
            copyObject = (T) new ObjectInputStream(byteArrayInputStream).readObject();
        } catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    } catch (IOException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
    return copyObject;
}

Use case

Object object = new Object();
Object duplicateObject = copyObject(object);

==============================================

Kotlin Update

If you use data class then you will have copy method that copies the Kotlin data class. Cool thing is you could also pass some values to modify the object with new copy. I would recommend this way.

Example:

//class

data class TestModel(val title: String, var subtitle: String)

Use case

val testClass = TestModel("Test title", "Test subtitle")

val newInstance = testClass.copy(subtitle = "new subtitle for copy instance")

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