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I am preparing for the OCA SE 7 exam, and some of these questions are really (!) tricky.

In one of the books Im using I found an error I think, so I would like to confirm the following please...

public static void main(String... args) {
    String autumn = new String("autumn");      // line one
    System.out.println("autumn" == "summer");  // line two
}

After the println method executes, how many String objects are there in the pool?

It is my understanding that: - line one does not add the string to the pool - line two creates "autumn" and "summer" and adds them to the pool So the correct answer in the book is 2.

However, I also think... since Im supposed to be paranoid with the exam questions... that also the string "false" is created and added to the pool... So I think 3 should be the correct answer... or does some other black magic happen like... "true" and "false" are already put into the pool by the JVM by default or something?...

Can someone please confirm?


Edit: after some research I find that it was not fair of me to speak of an 'error' in the book; as a general tip: exam questions are usually formulated in terms of 'the following code'; so they are clearly interested in plain old simple calculation of what the code itself is locally doing. So the scope therefore does not allow inspection of the println(boolean b) implementation or compiler optimizations. Fair enough :)

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    That was my point below in the comments... Feb 27, 2015 at 7:53

2 Answers 2

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It should be 2 strings: "autumn" and "false". The first is created by the first line. The second is created by the second line because the compiler would optimize it to just:

System.out.println(false);

which ends up calling PrintStream#print(boolean):

public void print(boolean b) {
    write(b ? "true" : "false");
}

This is what happens at runtime, i.e. after the code is executed. However, at the level of the constant pool stored in the bytecode, only 1 string constant is created which is "autumn" in the classfile of the class which contains your main method. You can verify this by running:

javap -c -verbose ClassName
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    Sure about the last sentence? Implementation of PrintStream#print(boolean).
    – Tom
    Feb 26, 2015 at 20:55
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    @krimat but the literal String used to create the String is added to the constant pool. Feb 26, 2015 at 21:03
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    @krimat When you create the new String, the string literal "autumn" is already in the pool. The newly created string is not placed in the pool.
    – rgettman
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:10
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    @krimat Because practically the compiler converts the line System.out.println("autumn" == "summer"); into System.out.println(false); as part of its optimization process. Therefore, the generated bytecode has no reference of "summer" anymore.
    – M A
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:18
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    @krimat The compiler knows for sure that autumn is different than summer. Therefore yes, it knows that it should generate false, short-circuiting the string evaluation.
    – M A
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:27
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true and false are not String objects, so they do not count. Even though the exam questions are supposed to be tricky, it's goal is to check the understanding of general concepts. Which is in this case: during class loading (before running), the string literals are loaded to the constant pool. So "autumn" and "summer" will be in the constant pool.

It is described here nicely: http://www.javaranch.com/journal/200409/ScjpTipLine-StringsLiterally.html

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    The implementation of PrintStream#print(boolean) is: write(b ? "true" : "false");, so it will add "true" and "false" to the pool. (#println(boolean) calls #print(boolean))
    – Tom
    Feb 26, 2015 at 20:55
  • Thank you @Tom: that is the implementation that I was looking at, but I suppose only either "true" or "false" will be created since the expression is short-circuit, no?
    – krimat_
    Feb 26, 2015 at 20:57
  • @krimat Interesting question. It might add all String literals if it loads the class, but I don't know for sure. Maybe manoutis way of verifying helps you here.
    – Tom
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:00
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    @BalintDomokos It matters, because System.out is a PrintStream.
    – Tom
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:07
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    @BalintDomokos Well, if OP is right and this book asks tricky questions and the reader might be supposed to learn to read library implementations, then I guess it matters here. But I don't know this book.
    – Tom
    Feb 26, 2015 at 21:21

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