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public static student[] arr = new student[10];

now, student is a class with some instance variables name(String) and age(int). I wanna know that as soon as this line is executed what will happen?? Will all the ten references get memory or I have to allocate them individually?? What if tried to access student[5].age? I need to know the memory allocation status.. Thank You...............

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5 Answers 5

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When the above statement is executed, JVM will create 10 contiguous memory location, each big enough to hold reference to student. This array, however, will contain no references or null if you will. When you execute statement like arr[0] = new student(); a student object will be created on heap and its reference will be saved in arr[0]. Remember that the array is also allocated on heap.

So once you have create 10 student objects, each will be allocated somewhere on the heap but their references will be stored in arr

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  • u mean to say that stack won't do anything in this?
    – Marwadi
    Oct 16, 2013 at 12:48
  • In your case no. Stack will only be used when you are using local variables (including arguments). For e.g. you have String a = new String("abc"). Now their are two things here. The variable 'a' will be created on stack but it will only hold reference to a string "abc" that is created on heap. So you have a string "abc" in heap whose reference is saved in a local variable 'a' on stack.
    – ata
    Oct 16, 2013 at 12:57
  • maybe this can clear up things: stackoverflow.com/questions/9991701/…
    – ata
    Oct 16, 2013 at 12:58
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Yes

public static student[] = new student[10];

As soon as that line executes ,JVM allocates memory for 10 student references.

From official docs on Arrays, look at the flow.

  // declares an array of integers
        int[] anArray;

        // allocates memory for 10 integers
        anArray = new int[10];

        // initialize first element
        anArray[0] = 100;
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  • dumb question from almost a year later: after anArray = new int blah, what would the array be filled with, since primitives can't be null?
    – hintss
    Oct 10, 2014 at 20:34
  • @hintss Answer after 2 year. For primitives, their array will be initialized with their default value. Default value (if nothing is assigned to it) for objects is null. Default value for integer is 0.
    – ata
    Aug 2, 2016 at 12:38
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Only reference variables will be created, when you create an array of objects. In your case reference variables for student class.

In the following image, a set of reference variables are created. Then, you can point those reference variables to actual objects, later.

Dog object array

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public static student[] arr = new student[10]; will allocate the memory for 10 students. These memory are filled with null.

So here you cant access student[5].age because the reference to the actual object doesn't exist.

We need to create the Object reference individually like below

 for(int i=0;i<10;i++){
   student[i]= new Student();
 } 

if you are accessing student[5].age before creating the actual object reference you will end with NullPointerException.

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Will all the ten references get memory or I have to allocate then individually?

You will get space for ten references. Those references will be initialized to null. If you want them set to anything other than null, you'll have to do it separately.

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