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I have an object that I need to copy in Java. I need to create a copy and run some tests on it without changing the original object itself.

I assumed that I needed to use the clone() method, but this is protected. Having done some research on the net, I can see that this can be overrided with a public method in my class, but I cannot find an explanation of how to do this. How would this be done?

Also, is this the best way of achieving what I need?

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5 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

There are two popular approaches. One is to provide a clone method as you mentioned, like so.

public class C implements Cloneable {
    @Override public C clone() {
        try {
            final C result = (C) super.clone();
            // copy fields that need to be copied here!
            return result;
        } catch (final CloneNotSupportedException ex) {
            throw new AssertionError();
        }
}

Pay attention to the "copy fields ... here!" part. The initial result is only a shallow copy, meaning that if there's a reference to an object, both the original and result will share the same object. For example, if C contains private int[] data you'd probably want to copy that.

...
final C result = (C) super.clone();
result.data = data.clone();
return result;
...

Note that you don't need to copy primitive fields, as their content is already copied, or immutable objects, as they can't change anyways.

The second approach is to provide a copy constructor.

public class C {
    public C(final C c) {
        // initialize this with c
    }
}

Or a copy factory.

public class C {
    public static C newInstance(final C c) {
        return new C(c);
    }

    private C(final C c) {
        // initialize this with c
    }
}

Both approaches have their respective properties. clone is nice because its a method, so you don't have to know the exact type. In the end, you should always end up with a "perfect" copy. The copy constructor is nice because the caller has a chance to decide, as can be seen by the Java Collections.

final List c = ... 
// Got c from somewhere else, could be anything.
// Maybe too slow for what we're trying to do?

final List myC = new ArrayList(c);
// myC is an ArrayList, with known properties

I recommend choosing either approach, whichever suits you better.

I'd use the other approaches, like reflective copying or immediate serializing/deserializing, in unit tests only. To me, they feel less appropriate for production code, mainly because of performance concerns.

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vote up 0 vote down

Joshua Bloch has some interesting things to say about cloneable. Depending on the size/construction of the object, I'd add a copy constructor to the object, or serialise/deserialise using one of the solutions mentioned above.

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vote up 14 vote down

Another option by using Copy Constructor

public final class Galaxy {

public Galaxy (double aMass, String aName) {
 fMass = aMass;
 fName = aName;
}

/**
* Copy constructor.
*/
public Galaxy(Galaxy aGalaxy) {
this(aGalaxy.getMass(), aGalaxy.getName());
//no defensive copies are created here, since 
//there are no mutable object fields (String is immutable)
}

/**
* Alternative style for a copy constructor, using a static newInstance
* method.
*/
public static Galaxy newInstance(Galaxy aGalaxy) {
  return new Galaxy(aGalaxy.getMass(), aGalaxy.getName());
}

public double getMass() {
  return fMass;
}

/**
* This is the only method which changes the state of a Galaxy
* object. If this method were removed, then a copy constructor
* would not be provided either, since immutable objects do not
* need a copy constructor.
*/
public void setMass( double aMass ){
  fMass = aMass;
}

public String getName() {
return fName;
}

// PRIVATE /////
private double fMass;
private final String fName;

/**
* Test harness.
*/
public static void main (String... aArguments){
Galaxy m101 = new Galaxy(15.0, "M101");

Galaxy m101CopyOne = new Galaxy(m101);
m101CopyOne.setMass(25.0);
System.out.println("M101 mass: " + m101.getMass());
System.out.println("M101Copy mass: " + m101CopyOne.getMass());

Galaxy m101CopyTwo = Galaxy.newInstance(m101);
m101CopyTwo.setMass(35.0);
System.out.println("M101 mass: " + m101.getMass());
System.out.println("M101CopyTwo mass: " + m101CopyTwo.getMass());
}
}

from: http://www.javapractices.com/topic/TopicAction.do?Id=12

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vote up 2 vote down

For test code Serialization is maybe the safest answer, especially if the object is already Serializable try Apache Commons SerializationUtils for an implementation.

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vote up 10 vote down

Some options:

  • You can implement Cloneable for your object and put clone() method as public. See full explanation here: http://www.cafeaulait.org/course/week4/46.html However, this produces a shallow copy and might be not something you want.
  • You can serialize and deserialize your object. You will need to implement Serializable interface for the object and all its fields.
  • You can use XStream to perform serialization via XML - you won't have to implement anything here.
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