TL;DR: If you ever really need to do new String("abc")
, you'll know you need to and you'll know why. It's so rare that it's almost valid to say you never need to. Just use "abc"
.
The long version:
When you have the code new String("abc")
the following things occur at various times:
- When the class containing that code is loaded, if a string with the characters
"abc"
is not already in the intern pool, it's created and put there.
- When the
new String("abc")
code is run:
- A reference to the
"abc"
string from the intern pool is passed into the String
constructor.
- A new
String
object is created and initialized by copying the characters from the String
passed into the constructor.
- The new
String
object is returned to you.
If string "abc" when created using new also placed the string in the pool, then why does intern()
says that string from the pool is returned if String pool contains the string otherwise the string object is added to the pool.
Because that's what intern
does. Note that calling intern
on a string literal is a no-op; string literals are all interned automatically. E.g.:
String s1 = "abc"; // Get a reference to the string defined by the literal
String s2 = s1.intern(); // No-op
System.out.println(s1 == s2); // "true"
System.out.println(s1 == "abc"); // "true", all literals are interned automatically
Also I want to know if we create a String using new then actually how many objects get created?
You create at least one String
object (the new, non-interned one), and possibly two (if the literal wasn't already in the pool; but again, that bit happens earlier, when the class file's literals are loaded):
String s1 = "abc"; // Get a reference to the string defined by the literal
String s2 = new String(s1); // Create a new `String` object (guaranteed)
System.out.println(s1 == s2); // "false"
String s3 = s2.intern(); // Get the interned version of the string with these characters
System.out.println(s1 == s3); // "true"