What is difference between className.class.someMethod
and className.this.someMethod
in Java?
1 Answer
The two are not related.
className.class
gives you an instance of the Class
class, so className.class.someMethod()
invokes someMethod
of Class
class.
className.this
is used to access the containing (enclosing) instance of an inner class, so className.this.someMethod()
invokes a method of that containing instance (which belongs to the className
class.
public class A
{
public void someMethod () {}
public class B
{
public void someMethod () {}
public void someOtherMethod ()
{
A.this.someMethod (); // invokes someMethod of the class A instance that
// encloses this B instance
A.class.getName (); // invokes the getName method of the Class class
}
}
}
-
what do you mean that A.class.getName() will invoke the getName method of the Class class? The Class class is confusing me. I would very much appreciate if you could make an example with system.out.print so I can see difference more clearly. Nov 14, 2015 at 13:16
-
@MyNameIsNemo There is a class whose name is
Class
(actually the full name is java.lang.Class). That class has a method calledgetName()
. You could pass the output of that method toSystem.out.print()
, since it returns a String.– EranNov 14, 2015 at 13:20 -
I see, so If I write B.class.someMethod() it will call someMethod() from class A? Nov 14, 2015 at 15:57
.class
gives you aClass
reference... whereasclassName.this
gives you the containing instance of the appropriate class.Class
class is for in java. And whatthis
means. This question is too broad.