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I have a situation where i have to access a non static member from inside a static method. I can access it with new instance, but current state will be lost as non static member will be re-initialized. How to achieve this without losing data?

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2  
That makes no sense. Inside the static function, there is no such thing as "the current state", since there's no instance. – Kerrek SB Sep 22 '11 at 23:44
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This doesn't make sense. Why would you have to that? – NullUserException Sep 22 '11 at 23:44
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Provide some code of what you're trying to do, as well as a description of the actual problem (in terms of your functional requirements, not technical constraints). – corsiKa Sep 22 '11 at 23:54
Down-vote will be changed to an up-vote once the original poster clarifies their original post as has been repeatedly requested. At present it's unanswerable. – Hovercraft Full Of Eels Sep 23 '11 at 0:21

5 Answers

Maybe you want a singleton. Then you could get the (only) instance of the class from within a static method and access its members.

The basic idea is

public class Singleton {
  private static Singleton instance = null;

  private Singleton() {}

  public static Singleton getInstance() {
    if (instance == null) {
        instance = new Singleton();
    }
    return instance;
  }
}

and then in some static method:

public static someMethod() {
    Singleton s = Singleton.getInstance();
    //do something with s
}
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What you are asking for doesn't really make sense. Just make your method non-static because your static method cannot be tied to an instance.

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Static methods do not apply to a particular instance/object, they're a class-level thing. Because of that, they're not given an instance reference. So, no you cannot do this.

If you can work out which instance reference to use another way, you could access the non-static methods of it.

Or, alternatively, re-architect your classes so that it's a non-static method.

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You can't. A static method is not associated with any particular state (aka any non-static members). In other words, they operate independently of any particular instance of the class so they cannot depend on non-static members.

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A non static member variable "is state". It's the state of a specific instance of that class.

When you say you want to access a non-static member variable, it's as good as saying "want to access a non-static member variable of a specific instance of class XXX", I mean the bolded part is implicit.

So it doesn't make sense to say "I can access it with new instance".

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