I'm studying up for the SCJP exam, upon doing some mock tests I came across this one :

It asks what is the output of the following :

class TestClass
{
   int i = getInt();
   int k = 20;
   public int getInt() {  return k+1;  }
   public static void main(String[] args)
   {
      TestClass t = new TestClass();
      System.out.println(t.i+"  "+t.k);
   }
}

I thought it would be 21 20, since t.i would invoke getInt, which then increments k to make 21.

However, the answer is 1 20. I don't understand why it would be 1, can anyone shed some light on this?

Thanks

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2 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

The variables are initialized from top to bottom.

This is what happens:

  1. Initially both i and k have the (default) value 0.
  2. The value computed by getInt() (which at the time is 0 + 1) is assigned to i
  3. 20 is assigned to k
  4. 1 20 is printed.

Good reading:

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1  
+1, when i is initialized, k still has the default value of 0 – unbeli Nov 21 '11 at 20:31
Right. Good point about default values. Answer updated. – aioobe Nov 21 '11 at 20:34
2  
@HotLicks - There's nothing static about this. – Paul Bellora Nov 21 '11 at 20:39
No, it's not handled by the constant pool. Check with javap yourself. – aioobe Nov 21 '11 at 20:39
1  
@HotLicks - I for one am having trouble following you. What's your point? Nothing is being swizzled. And the downvote here is perplexing. – Paul Bellora Nov 22 '11 at 6:20
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jvm will follows like this,

1.identification for non-static members from top to bottom 2.executing non-static variables and blocks from top to bottom 3.executing the constructor......

in the first step jvm will provide default values..on that time variables in readindirectly write only state..

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