7

equals and hashCode method must be consistent, which means that when two objects are equal according to equals method their hashCode method should return the same hash value.

Java returns a unique hash code if we do not override the hashCode() method.

class HashValue {

    int x;

    public boolean equals(Object oo) {
        // if(oo instanceof Hashvalue) uncommenting ths gives error.dunno why?
        // :|
        HashValue hh = (HashValue) oo;

        if (this.x == hh.x)
            return true;
        else
            return false;
    }

    HashValue() {
        x = 11;
    }

}

class Hashing {
    public static void main(String args[]) {
        HashValue hv = new HashValue();
        HashValue hv2 = new HashValue();

        System.out.println(hv.hashCode());
        System.out.println(hv2.hashCode());

        if (hv.equals(hv2))
            System.out.println("EQUAL");
        else
            System.out.println("NOT EQUAL");
    }
}

Why does uncommenting the line gives compilation error?

If the objects have unequal hash codes, why are they shown equal even though the default hashcode varies?

5
  • Understood the scope and type error. But why equals is printed?? :| Jan 2, 2010 at 6:30
  • Why don't you use the debugger to understand what your code does? W.r.t. the commented line, Hashvalue should be HashValue, Java is case sensitive.
    – starblue
    Jan 2, 2010 at 8:04
  • compilation error? what is the error message? . . . another reminder: returned hashcode is not unique. Impossible to create unique int hashcodes for all possible Long values. (tum)
    – user85421
    Jan 2, 2010 at 19:47
  • this is a rather trivial programming question and the only point I see is that uncommenting THAT line makes hh be out of scope for the following lines... but the title of this question is so misleading and has nothing to do with it...
    – Zordid
    Apr 27, 2010 at 13:40
  • @Myth17 But why equals is printed?? The answer is : for both object hv & hv2 you haven't explicitly modified the value of instance variable x. Hence, for both the object it gets same default value for x i.e. 0. try printing hv.x & hv2.x Had you implemented a constructor in Hasch Class and created objects as : HashValue hv=new HashValue(3); HashValue hv2=new HashValue(4); then NOT EQUAL would have been the output.
    – KNU
    Feb 27, 2014 at 5:10

7 Answers 7

7

Equality is only determined by method equals(). And method hashCode() is used in other situations, like by Map or Set. It is somewhat like a pre-condition or hint before actually calling equals (for efficiency). So it is assumed that if 2 objects are equal (that is, equals() returns true), then their hashCodes() must return the same value.

So in your code, 2 objects are equal, as long as your overriden equals() returns true, no matter what hashCode() does. hashCode() is not called at all when comparing for equality.

This question has more in-depth information regarding to the relationship between equals() and hashCode().

1
  • So we have to make sure ourseleves that the equal objects have equal hashcodes? Coz java will report them as equal bcoz of the attribute matching even though the hashcode was different? Jan 2, 2010 at 6:46
6

First, in that line, you need to change Hashvalue to HashValue, since your class is actually called HashValue.

Then, uncommenting the line gives you this:

public boolean equals(Object oo) {
    if(oo instanceof HashValue)
        HashValue hh = (HashValue)oo;

    if (this.x==hh.x) {
        return true;
    } else {
        return false;
    }
}

There are a few things wrong with this:

  1. This doesn't compile because hh isn't in scope when you end up using it.

  2. The first if statement should either make sure that the function doesn't run at all when you compare two things that aren't HashValues (i.e. throw an exception), or it should return false because HashValues are never equal to other types of objects. I generally prefer returning false to throwing an exception.

  3. The second if statement is redundant, because you're just returning what the condition evaluates to.

Rework your method like this:

public boolean equals(Object oo) {
    if(!(oo instanceof Hashvalue)) {
        return false;
    }

    HashValue hh = (HashValue)oo;
    return (this.x == hh.x);
}

This isn't quite right, either. To make sure that all equal objects have the same hash code, you have to override hashCode() in HashValue, and you must make sure that it lives up to the guarantee. Here, you could just add this:

// inside HashValue
int hashCode() {
    return x;
}

The implementation is trivial because your object is just a wrapper around an int. You'll need to think harder about this as your objects get more sophisticated.

6
  • Understood the scope probloem. Even after making the changes you did, the ans if still equal for different hashcode. How does this work?? Jan 2, 2010 at 6:28
  • You need to actually override the method. See my edits above. Jan 2, 2010 at 6:38
  • So we have to make sure ourseleves that the equal objects have equal hashcodes? Coz java will report them as equal bcoz of the attribute matching even though the hashcode was different? Jan 2, 2010 at 6:43
  • Yes, it's up to you to implement both of these methods and make sure they behave correctly. If you don't override one or the other, equals() or hashCode() method from some superclass (e.g. Object) will get called, and it most likely won't do what you intend. Jan 2, 2010 at 6:46
  • You should definitely NOT throw an exception if oo is not of the correct class. Nothing about equals() prohibits people from calling it with a different type, as long as it is symmetric. Just return false. Aug 28, 2010 at 5:13
1

For starters, you need to capitalize the v in "Hashvalue"

if(oo instanceof Hashvalue)

should be

if (oo instanceof HashValue)
0
1

HashValue and Hashvalue are two different identifiers

if(oo instanceof HashValue) works because your class-name is HashValue not Hashvalue

EDIT :

Your code doesn't work because hh isn't in scope when you are using it.

This works:

/* A program to check hashcode values for object
@Author Myth17
 */

class HashValue 
{

   int x;

   public boolean equals(Object oo)
  {
    HashValue hh=new HashValue();
    if(oo instanceof HashValue) 
       hh = (HashValue)oo;

    if(this.x==hh.x)
      return true;
    else
      return false;
  }

   HashValue()
  {
     x=11;
   }

  }

 class  Hashing
 {
     public static void main(String args[])
    {
       HashValue hv=new HashValue();
       HashValue hv2=new HashValue();

      System.out.println(hv.hashCode());
      System.out.println(hv2.hashCode());

      if(hv.equals(hv2))
        System.out.println("EQUAL");
      else
         System.out.println("NOT EQUAL");
    }
  }
2
  • 1
    Unnecessarily constructing a new HashValue() every time you call equals is going to give you some really horrible performance if you compare a bunch of these. This is a quick fix when his method really needs to be reworked. Jan 2, 2010 at 6:19
  • @Prasoon: it's also wrong, or at least weird, because your equals() method will say that all HashValues are equal to non-HashValues. e.g. try: new HashValue().equals(new String()). This returns true. I don't think that makes any sense. Jan 2, 2010 at 18:55
1

As others have already pointed out it the methods "equals" and the "hashCode" serve different purposes.

From the specification of hashCode method in Objectone can infer that:

  • It is required that two equal objects should return same integer result when hashCode method is invoked on them
  • It is highly recommended that unequal objects return distinct integer values

Your code (taking into consideration the change tgamblin has proposed) satisfies criteria (a) hence you get the output as "EQUALS".

But is a good practice to follow (b) as this results in better performance when instance of the class are used as hashtable keys. When unequal objects return the same hashCode and if such a class is used as hashtable key, then every object hashes to the same bucket, and hashtable would degenerate to a linkedlist leading to reduced performance.

0

In the following code:

public boolean equals(Object oo) {
    if(oo instanceof Hashvalue) 
        HashValue hh = (HashValue) oo;

    if (this.x == hh.x)
        return true;
    else
        return false;
}

there are a couple of issue: 1. Hashvalue is not recognised by your compiler. It should be "HashValue" 2. hh is out of scope once out of if-block. Hence, compiler error.

You can change your program to following and it will work:

 public boolean equals(Object oo) {
     if(!(oo instanceof Hashvalue)) 
         return false;

     HashValue hh = (HashValue) oo;
     if (this.x == hh.x)
        return true;
     else
        return false;
}

or you can make it more concise as follows:

 public boolean equals(Object oo) {
     if(oo instanceof Hashvalue && this.x == ((HashValue) oo).x) 
         return true;
     return false;
}
-1
int x;
public static void main(String args[]){
    E a = new E();
    System.out.println(a.hashcode());
    E b = new E();
    System.out.println(b.hashcode());
}

public int hashcode(){
    return x*17;
}
1
  • 3
    Hi Mario, welcome to StackOverflow. I'm not sure what you're attempting to add here, as this question was already answered. But what you added has no description and numerous errors. -1. I suggest you click the "delete" link at the bottom of your answer unless there is significant editing to come. Aug 28, 2010 at 5:23

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