I have a class Note
and a class Meeting
. There is an ArrayList
named noteList
in class Note
. When an object of Meeting
is created it is then registered in the noteList
.
I just want to demostrate in the main class that two objects of Meeting
can be created at the same time (or at the close time). My program is:
public class Note{
//some field and method hier
public void add(Meeting m){
notes.add(m);
}
private static final List<Entry> notes =
Collections.synchronizedList(new ArrayList<Entry>());
}
public class Meeting implements Runnable{
public Meeting(Note note_1,Note note_2,Calendar calendar){
note_1.add(this);
note_2.add(this);}
//some method
}
public class Test implements Runnable{
public static void main(String[] args) {
Note note_1 = new Note();
Note note_2 = new Note();
Meeting m_1 = new Meeting(note_1,note_2);
Meeting m_2 = new Meeting(note_2,note_1)
Thread t1 = new Thread(m_1);
Thread t2 = new Thread(m_2)
t1.start();
t2.start();
}
//t1,t2 are two thread and they start one to one(not at the same time).
I have read anywhere that wait()
, notify()
or notifyAll()
can be used, but they must be used in a synchronized method. I have no synchronized methods in my program.
m_1
is always created (instantiated) beforem_2
though they will both exist simultaneously in memory until the GC decides to clean them up. Do you mean something else? In any case if you search for why double checked locking for singletons doesn't work you'll get a very good overview of synchronisation issues in Java.