it is an example about wait()
and notify()
in Java Concurrency. My theory knowledge about it doesn't explain me about this code and I cannot explain why this gives me a misunderstood result.
So, This is code to get an idea:
public class ExampleOne {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Test b = new Test();
b.start();
synchronized(b){
try{
b.wait();
} catch(InterruptedException ex){
ex.printStackTrace();
}
System.out.println(b.total);
}
}
}
class Test extends Thread {
int total;
@Override
public void run(){
synchronized(this){
for(int i =0;i<50;i++){
total+=i;
System.out.println("I am here");
}
notify();
}
}
}
The result is : 4950
So, how to understand this process (how total
can be 4950)?
I understand that If I call wait()
it stops the object's thread which called this method and woken up it then another thread calls notify()
. Also, synchronized()
block restricts threads and accept only one thread in one time.
So when thread calls notify(), it becomes non-active until other thread calls wait()?
How wait() and notify() play it's role in this code? Also
synchronized()
block?So, how many threads are created in this code?
I am confused about this. Help me to figure it out.
wait()
on object puts the calling thread into a waiting state, untilnotify()
ornotifyAll()
is called on the same object. It's not the object's thread. It's the thread, that acquires a lock on the object, and callswait()
on it.Test
thread callsnotify()
before the main thread callswait()
, main thread will wait forever. I suggest you moveb.start
insidesynchronized(b)
to avoid this potential problem.