There are a couple of ways to do your check for class equality before checking member equality, and I think both are useful in the right circumstances.
- Use the
instanceofoperator. - Use
this.getClass().equals(that.getClass()).
I use #1 in a final equals implementation, or when implementing an interface that prescribes an algorithm for equals (like the java.util collection interfaces—the right way to check with with (obj instanceof Set) or whatever interface you're implementing). It's generally a bad choice when equals can be overridden because that breaks the symmetry property.
Option #2 allows the class to be safely extended without overriding equals or breaking symmetry.
If your class is also Comparable, the equals and compareTo methods should be consistent too. Here's a template for the equals method in a Comparable class:
final class MyClass implements Comparable<MyClass>
{
…
@Override
public boolean equals(Object obj)
{
/* If compareTo and equals aren't final, we should check with getClass instead. */
if (!(obj instanceof MyClass))
return false;
return compareTo((MyClass) obj) == 0;
}
}
