As a Java programmer, one needs a mental model to predict the behaviour of Java programs, at both compile-time and at runtime. So long as one's mental model makes correct predictions compared with reality (i.e. compared with the behaviour the language specification describes, or compared with the behaviour of an actual Java implementation), then the mental model is viable. Two different, incompatible mental models may sometimes both be viable, and this is an example.
Here's what the language specification (§15.9.4) has to say:
Next, the selected constructor of the specified class type is invoked. ...
The value of a class instance creation expression is a reference to the newly created object of the specified class.
So the constructor is invoked, and the result of the expression invoking the constructor is a reference to the new object. The specification doesn't say that the constructor returns that reference, and it also doesn't say that the constructor doesn't return that reference.
Let's consider the "constructor returns a reference to the new object" mental model. It does make intuitive sense; when you invoke a constructor in a new Object()
expression, the expression has a value much like when you invoke a method in a foo.bar()
expression, the expression has a value. In the latter case, the expression's value is the method's return value, so it may be intuitively apppealing to say in the former case, the expression's value is the constructor's return value.
Now, it is a very clunky mental model, because you have to imagine that:
- Constructors end with an implicit
return this;
,
- Every bare
return;
in a constructor is implicitly return this;
,
- The implicit
return this;
is only present when it's reachable, because the static checker (which does check implicit code, e.g. in default no-arg constructors) forbids unreachable code,
- The statements
this();
and super();
are illegal when used as expressions, for a completely arbitrary reason.
The alternative mental model, that the constructor doesn't return anything, is a lot simpler, and is viable without any caveats. As an educator, I favour teaching this mental model due to its simplicity.
But as long as you are careful, then both mental models make identical predictions about the behaviour of Java programs. Philosophically speaking, it's a bit like different interpretations of quantum mechanics; as long as they all make the same predictions, then there is no scientific basis to say that a particular one is true and the others are false. Rather, the "constructor doesn't return anything" model is just simpler and easier to apply, so in my opinion it is more useful to learn and teach.