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.

 1. Use the `instanceof` operator.
 2. 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. 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;
      }
    
    }