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I know that start() creates a new thread and invokes the run() inside that thread and thus thread is executed. But what will be the correct answer of the question...Is it start() or is it run()? and why?

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  • What do you mean by "run a thread"? You can start, pause or stop a thread. And then you can run stuff on that thread. But I am not sure what "running a thread" could mean...
    – assylias
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:12
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    Even I am not getting what it means but the options are those two. It is a multiple choice type question.
    – Leo
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:14
  • So it’s a mind-guess question rather than a question about Java programming. Then it’s of no use to think about it; instead, the creator of that multiple choice question should be punished.
    – Holger
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:33
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    @Holger - So, the answer should be your processor:P Dec 1, 2014 at 12:35
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    @TheLostMind: the problem with these kind of questions is that not only there is no way of giving a different answer, like yours, usually there is also no way of asking back “what do you mean with ‘run’?” or “Do you know that ‘run’ is probably the most overloaded word of the English language?” or well, “What does ‘is used’ mean, do I know the guy your question is about?”
    – Holger
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:40

4 Answers 4

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You should call myThread.start() because start() makes a native call to start0() which actually creates and executes the run() method in a new thread. run() will execute the code in the current thread.

run() method defines what is to be executed. start() executes run() in a new / separate thread whereas calling run() directly executes run() in the current thread.

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  • Ok. So the flow is: start() --> run() --> code in the current thread. So, to be more specific, is it not the run() which is running the code of the current thread i.e. the thread?
    – Leo
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:25
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    @Leo - run() is a method which defines what to execute. start() creates a new thread and executes code inside run() on the new thread. directly calling run() executes code inside run() on the current thread. What start() and in turn start0() does internally is too complex..a new java stack, a new PC register(s) , a new native method stack will be created for each thread.. So, yes, the correct order is : start() --> some magic here --> run() in a new thread. Dec 1, 2014 at 12:31
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    @Leo, Learn this mantra: start() is provided by the library for your code to call when you want to create a new thread. run() is the method that you provide for the library to call in the new thread. Dec 1, 2014 at 14:02
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The mechanism whereby the run method is invoked on a new thread is extralinguistic: it cannot be represented in terms of Java code. This is the crucial line in the start method:

 start0();

start0 is a native method whose invocation will:

 •cause a new native thread-of-execution to be created;
 •cause the run method to be invoked on that thread.
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You should call Thread.start() because it only creates a OS thread and assign this job to separate method stack. If you call Thread.run it will work like a pure java code instead of thread. It will use main thread stack.

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  • Ok. Forget about Thread.run(). Thread.start() assigns the job to separate method stack. And inside that run() method is exceuted which runs the content of the thread. So, is it not the run() which runs the thread, more specifically? What do you say!
    – Leo
    Dec 1, 2014 at 12:32
  • Ya . Run method has just used the Current thread stack. start method creates a new thread and it has its own stack , then start method execute run method. So Now Current thread is new thread if you are using start method.
    – Siva Kumar
    Dec 1, 2014 at 13:01
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thread.start() is the right way. Because internally it actually creates a separate thread i.e a separate call Stack is created and calls thread.run() on that thread. The JVM creates a separate partition for this thread in the memory to run when you call thread.start() method.

If you do thread.run() it's like a normal method that you execute in single thread environment. Just like System.out.println("xx");

Please read the documentation you'll understand better Link

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