1

Hey guys im just messing around and I cant get this to work:

public static void main(String[] args){
    Scanner input = new Scanner (System.in);
    String x = "hey";
    System.out.println("What is x?:  ");
    x = input.nextLine();
    System.out.println(x);
    if (x == "hello")
        System.out.println("hello");
    else
        System.out.println("goodbye");
}

it is of course supposed to print hello hello if you enter hello but it will not. I am using Eclipse just to mess around. A little quick help please

10 Answers 10

5

Should be if (x.equals("hello")).

With java objects, == is used for reference comparison. .equals() for value comparison.

7
  • This is weird I have never had to do this with scanner. Is this an Eclipse specific? probably dumb question...
    – Josh
    Aug 10, 2011 at 5:47
  • 2
    This isn't "weird", it is the way things are done in Java. It has nothing to do with Eclipse ;)
    – Jacob
    Aug 10, 2011 at 5:48
  • 5
    or null-safe: "hello".equals(x)
    – pmnt
    Aug 10, 2011 at 5:48
  • no, this is the behavior of java, the references of the strings is not equal although their content is the same.
    – MByD
    Aug 10, 2011 at 5:48
  • 2
    This is not about scanner or if statements, it is regarding object comparison in Java in general.
    – MByD
    Aug 10, 2011 at 5:50
3

Don't use == when testing for equality of non basic types, it will test for reference equality. Use .equals(..) instead.

Look at the following diagram:

equals vs ==

When using == you're comparing the addresses of the boxes, when using equals you're comparing their content.

0
2

You can't compare a string like that.Because String is a class.So if you want to compare its content use equals

 if (x.equals("hello"))
        System.out.println("hello");
    else
        System.out.println("goodbye");
1

x=="hello" compares the references not values , you will have to do x.equals("hello").

1
String s = "something", t = "maybe something else";
    if (s == t)      // Legal, but usually WRONG.
    if (s.equals(t)) // RIGHT
    if (s > t)    // ILLEGAL
    if (s.compareTo(t) > 0) // CORRECT>
1

Use "hello".equals(x) and never reverse since it does not handle null.

1

== operator checks equality of references (not values). In your case you have 2 String type object which have different reference but same value "hello". String class has "equals" method for checking values equality. The syntax is if(str1.equals(str2)).

1

Try this as the comparison:

if (x.equals("hello"))
0

Use x.equals("hello");

http://leepoint.net/notes-java/data/expressions/22compareobjects.html

0

Take this sample program:

public class StringComparison {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String hello = "hello";
        System.out.println(hello == "hello");

        String hello2 = "hel" + "lo";
        System.out.println(hello == hello2);

        String hello3 = new String(hello);
        System.out.println(hello == hello3);
        System.out.println(hello3.equals(hello));
    }
}

Its output would be:

true
true
false
true

Objects hello and hello3 have different references that's why hello == hello3 is false, but they contain the same string, therefore equals returns true.

The expression hello == hello2 is true because Java compiler is smart enough to perform concatenation of two string constants.

So to compare String objects, you have to use equals method.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.