I am confused with the memory allocation of references in Java when you pass them to the methods in Java. As a Test I did an example as below,
class Store{
public int[] buffer = new int[5];
}
class ConsumeStore{
Store store;
public ConsumeStore(Store store){
this.store = store;
}
public int useStore(){
return store.buffer[0];
}
}
class ProduceStore{
Store store;
public ProduceStore(Store store){
this.store = store;
}
public void putStore(){
store.buffer[0] = 100;
}
}
public class CheckRef {
public static void main(String args[]){
Store store = new Store();
ConsumeStore consStore = new ConsumeStore(store);
ProduceStore prodStore = new ProduceStore(store);
prodStore.putStore();
System.out.println(consStore.useStore());
}
}
Well the output is 100.
Here I am passing the Store reference to ProducerStore. Inside ProducerStore I am assigning it to the class member of it. I am doing the same for ConsumerStore as well.
Could someone explain me how the memory allocation is done for Store referece and how it shared among the ProducerStore and ConsumerStore?