Consider the simple test class:
import java.math.BigDecimal;
/**
* @author The Elite Gentleman
*
*/
public class Main {
/**
* @param args
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
// TODO Auto-generated method stub
BigDecimal x = new BigDecimal("1");
BigDecimal y = new BigDecimal("1.00");
System.out.println(x.equals(y));
System.out.println(x.compareTo(y) == 0 ? "true": "false");
}
}
You can (consciously) say that x is equal to y (not object reference), but when you run the program, the following result shows:
false
true
Question: What's the difference between compareTo() and equals() in BigDecimal that compareTo can determine that x is equal to y?
PS: I see that BigDecimal has an inflate() method on equals() method. What does inflate() do actually?
inflate(): it's not part of the public API because it only manipulates the internal representation and has no visible effect to the "outside". So unless you really want to study the implementation ofBigDecimalin-depth, I'd suggest you ignore this method. – Joachim Sauer Jul 22 '11 at 8:34