Had a conversation with a coworker the other day about this.
There's the obvious which is to use a constructor, but what other ways are there?
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Had a conversation with a coworker the other day about this. There's the obvious which is to use a constructor, but what other ways are there?
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There are four different ways (I really don’t know is there a fifth way to do this) to create objects in java:
MyObject object = new MyObject();2. Using Class.forName() If we know the name of the class & if it has a public default constructor we can create an object in this way. MyObject object = (MyObject) Class.forName("subin.rnd.MyObject").newInstance(); 3. Using clone() The clone() can be used to create a copy of an existing object. MyObject anotherObject = new MyObject(); MyObject object = anotherObject.clone();4. Using object deserialization Object deserialization is nothing but creating an object from its serialized form. ObjectInputStream inStream = new ObjectInputStream(anInputStream ); MyObject object = (MyObject) inStream.readObject();Now you know how to create an object. But its advised to create objects only when it is necessary to do so. |
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From Josh block: used named static methods as "constructors" as they are more readable, as opposed to many constructors named the same with differing parameter lists. --James |
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there is also ClassLoader.loadClass(string) but this is not often used. and if you want to be a total lawyer about it, arrays are technically objects because of an array's .length property. so initializing an array creates an object. |
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From an API user perspective, another alternative to constructors are static factory methods (like BigInteger.valueOf()), though for the API author (and technically "for real") the objects are still created using a constructor. |
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You can also instantiate objects via JNI. |
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Within the Java language, the only way to create an object is by calling it's constructor, be it explicitly or implicitly. Using reflection results in a call to the constructor method, deserialization uses reflection to call the constructor, factory methods wrap the call to the constructor to abstract the actual construction and cloning is similarly a wrapped constructor call. |
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When in doubt, look at the language spec. 12.5 Creation of New Class Instances http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/execution.html#12.5 15.9 Class Instance Creation Expressions http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/expressions.html#41147 |
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Depends exactly what you mean by create but some other ones are:
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Reflection, but that ultimately uses a constructor. |
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Reflection:
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Cloning and deserialization. |
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