79

While looking at online code samples, I have sometimes come across an assignment of a String constant to a String object via the use of the new operator.

For example:

String s;
...
s = new String("Hello World");

This, of course, compared to

s = "Hello World";

I'm not familiar with this syntax and have no idea what the purpose or effect would be. Since String constants typically get stored in the constant pool and then in whatever representation the JVM has for dealing with String constants, would anything even be allocated on the heap?

4
  • 1
    Take a look at this blog post. kjetilod.blogspot.com/2008/09/…
    – Ruggs
    Dec 24, 2008 at 4:01
  • @Ruggs well, thanks for the link, but it would be nice if you added the disclaimer about the caveats, as this guy did.
    – user719662
    Jan 14, 2016 at 20:47
  • help.semmle.com/wiki/display/JAVA/…
    – Vadzim
    Aug 20, 2018 at 16:31
  • 2
    Regardless of the answers on how/why new String(String) should be used, s = new String("Hello World") where the parameter is a literal does not make sense in Java, and probably never will. Oct 7, 2019 at 12:19

9 Answers 9

83

The one place where you may think you want new String(String) is to force a distinct copy of the internal character array, as in

small=new String(huge.substring(10,20))

However, this behavior is unfortunately undocumented and implementation dependent.

I have been burned by this when reading large files (some up to 20 MiB) into a String and carving it into lines after the fact. I ended up with all the strings for the lines referencing the char[] consisting of entire file. Unfortunately, that unintentionally kept a reference to the entire array for the few lines I held on to for a longer time than processing the file - I was forced to use new String() to work around it, since processing 20,000 files very quickly consumed huge amounts of RAM.

The only implementation agnostic way to do this is:

small=new String(huge.substring(10,20).toCharArray());

This unfortunately must copy the array twice, once for toCharArray() and once in the String constructor.

There needs to be a documented way to get a new String by copying the chars of an existing one; or the documentation of String(String) needs to be improved to make it more explicit (there is an implication there, but it's rather vague and open to interpretation).

Pitfall of Assuming what the Doc Doesn't State

In response to the comments, which keep coming in, observe what the Apache Harmony implementation of new String() was:

public String(String string) {
    value = string.value;
    offset = string.offset;
    count = string.count;
}

That's right, no copy of the underlying array there. And yet, it still conforms to the (Java 7) String documentation, in that it:

Initializes a newly created String object so that it represents the same sequence of characters as the argument; in other words, the newly created string is a copy of the argument string. Unless an explicit copy of original is needed, use of this constructor is unnecessary since Strings are immutable.

The salient piece being "copy of the argument string"; it does not say "copy of the argument string and the underlying character array supporting the string".

Be careful that you program to the documentation and not one implementation.

20
  • "However, this behavior is unfortunately undocumented and implementation dependent." JavaDoc for the String(String) constructor says "Initializes a newly created String object so that it represents the same sequence of characters as the argument; in other words, the newly created string is a copy of the argument string. Unless an explicit copy of original is needed, use of this constructor is unnecessary since Strings are immutable. " which is a roundabout way of saying said constructor makes an explicit copy of the underying char[] of String passed to it.
    – Powerlord
    Oct 13, 2010 at 21:13
  • 7
    @R. Bemrose. No, that's what it could imply. What it states is that you will get a new copy of the String object - it makes no statement about the constituent contents of said object. A new String sharing the underlying array is still a new String and a copy of the old one. Contrast that to String(char[] value), where it explicitly states: The contents of the character array are copied. Oct 14, 2010 at 18:16
  • 1
    @Monkey I disagree with your interpretation of the Javadoc. We can leverage our boolean equations here: "Unless an explicit copy of original is needed, use of this constructor is unnecessary" translates to !explicitCopyRequired --> constructor is unnecessary (--> meaning 'implies') and the rule a --> b <==> !b --> !a to reveal constructor is necessary --> explicitCopyRequired. If you're using the constructor, it's because you need an explicit copy. Now, I agree it could be better worded, but when you break it down, it's clear that this constructor, by contract, makes an explicit copy.
    – corsiKa
    Mar 28, 2011 at 17:10
  • 2
    @Glowcoder - make all the inferences you want, that's not what the JavaDoc states. And IIRC at least one major JVM implementation implemented new String(String) without making a copy of the underlying character array - it might have been Apache Harmony, but I am not sure. Mar 29, 2011 at 1:58
  • 10
    Note that in recent versions of the Oracle JVM substrings do not share the underlying array in the way that is described in this answer. substring instead copies the data to a new array. This started in Java 1.7 update 6. See here.
    – Lii
    Oct 2, 2016 at 9:33
10

The only time I have found this useful is in declaring lock variables:

private final String lock = new String("Database lock");

....

synchronized(lock)
{
    // do something
}

In this case, debugging tools like Eclipse will show the string when listing what locks a thread currently holds or is waiting for. You have to use "new String", i.e. allocate a new String object, because otherwise a shared string literal could possibly be locked in some other unrelated code.

6
  • 1
    I think it's better to have use private static class Lock {}; private final Lock lock = new Lock();, as the class name shows up pretty much everywhere. However, it will cost you a couple of K, because HotSPot isn't that efficient. Dec 24, 2008 at 12:33
  • I can buy that. Maybe I'll give it a try next time.
    – Dave Ray
    Dec 26, 2008 at 1:55
  • 13
    Object lock = new Object() does the same at all ;-)
    – Hardcoded
    Nov 26, 2009 at 13:57
  • @Hardcoded Right, except for that it's not Serializable, so I prefer new Object[0].
    – maaartinus
    Jun 18, 2015 at 12:48
  • 3
    @maaartinus What's the point of serializing sync-monitors? Sync won't work between the instances, so it's pointless. In contrast, my monitors are always final.
    – Hardcoded
    Jul 9, 2015 at 12:38
6

String s1="foo"; literal will go in StringPool and s1 will refer.

String s2="foo"; this time it will check "foo" literal is already available in StringPool or not as now it exist so s2 will refer the same literal.

String s3=new String("foo"); "foo" literal will be created in StringPool first then through string arg constructor String Object will be created i.e "foo" in the heap due to object creation through new operator then s3 will refer it.

String s4=new String("foo"); same as s3

so System.out.println(s1==s2); //true due to literal comparison.

and System.out.println(s3==s4);// false due to object comparison(s3 and s4 is created at different places in heap)

2
  • 5
    Not sure why this is upvoted... It doesn't answer the question in any way. May 19, 2017 at 17:06
  • I found it helpful because it answered a question I couldn't find, which was: "Do strings created with the constructor skip interning"
    – beartech1
    Feb 21, 2019 at 19:31
4

The sole utility for this constructor described by Software Monkey and Ruggs seems to have disappeared from JDK7. There is no longer an offset field in class String, and substring always use

Arrays.copyOfRange(char[] original, int from, int to) 

to trim the char array for the copy.

2
  • 2
    Until, and unless it's documented to do so, you are still relying on an implementation side-effect, not a documented action. Just because JDK7 happens to copy the array in substring() does not mean it must in every implementation (and OpenJDK is not the only JVM implementation out there). Nov 13, 2013 at 20:36
  • Indeed, but the problem described here IS a side-effect of the particular implementation, not something that is specified or documented anywhere. So it is relevant. Nov 28, 2013 at 16:11
2

Well, that depends on what the "..." is in the example. If it's a StringBuffer, for example, or a byte array, or something, you'll get a String constructed from the data you're passing.

But if it's just another String, as in new String("Hello World!"), then it should be replaced by simply "Hello World!", in all cases. Strings are immutable, so cloning one serves no purpose -- it's just more verbose and less efficient to create a new String object just to serve as a duplicate of an existing String (whether it be a literal or another String variable you already have).

In fact, Effective Java (which I highly recommend) uses exactly this as one of its examples of "Avoid creating unnecessary objects":


As an extreme example of what not to do, consider this statement:

String s = new String("stringette");  **//DON'T DO THIS!**

(Effective Java, Second Edition)

1
  • 2
    Just because you use the overload containing a string doesn't mean it's pointless - see Software Monkey's answer.
    – Jon Skeet
    Dec 24, 2008 at 7:44
0

Here is a quote from the book Effective Java Third Edition (Item 17: Minimize Mutability):

A consequence of the fact that immutable objects can be shared freely is that you never have to make defensive copies of them (Item 50). In fact, you never have to make any copies at all because the copies would be forever equivalent to the originals. Therefore, you need not and should not provide a clone method or copy constructor (Item 13) on an immutable class. This was not well understood in the early days of the Java platform, so the String class does have a copy constructor, but it should rarely, if ever, be used.

So It was a wrong decision by Java, since String class is immutable they should not have provided copy constructor for this class, in cases you want to do costly operation on immutable classes, you can use public mutable companion classes which are StringBuilder and StringBuffer in case of String.

-1

Generally, this indicates someone who isn't comfortable with the new-fashioned C++ style of declaring when initialized.

Back in the C days, it wasn't considered good form to define auto variables in an inner scope; C++ eliminated the parser restriction, and Java extended that.

So you see code that has

int q;
for(q=0;q<MAX;q++){
    String s;
    int ix;
    // other stuff
    s = new String("Hello, there!");
    // do something with s
}

In the extreme case, all the declarations may be at the top of a function, and not in enclosed scopes like the for loop here.

IN general, though, the effect of this is to cause a String ctor to be called once, and the resulting String thrown away. (The desire to avoid this is just what led Stroustrup to allow declarations anywhere in the code.) So you are correct that it's unnecessary and bad style at best, and possibly actually bad.

2
  • 4
    Either I completely don't understand this, or it's not related to the actual question. The question is about the difference between ...="Hello" and ...=new String("Hello"). You seem to be talking about the difference between "String s=..." and "String s; ...; s=...".
    – Dave Costa
    Dec 24, 2008 at 14:10
  • 1
    And I have to heartily disagree with "back in the C days, it wasn't considered good form to define auto variables in an inner scope", at least since the C days of 1991; in my experience it has always been considered best to declare variables in C with as narrow a scope as the compiler would allow, which, again since 1991, has been at least at the top of any block. Nov 29, 2013 at 18:40
-1

There are two ways in which Strings can be created in Java. Following are the examples for both the ways: 1) Declare a variable of type String(a class in Java) and assign it to a value which should be put between double quotes. This will create a string in the string pool area of memory. eg: String str = "JAVA";

2)Use the constructor of String class and pass a string(within double quotes) as an argument. eg: String s = new String("JAVA"); This will create a new string JAVA in the main memory and also in the string pool if this string is not already present in string pool.

1
  • Then there's substring, trim, replace, replaceAll, StringBuilder, StringBuffer, etc. Nov 13, 2013 at 20:38
-2

I guess it will depend on the code samples you're seeing.

Most of the times using the class constructor "new String()" in code sample are only to show a very well know java class instead of creating a new one.

You should avoid using it most of the times. Not only because string literals are interned but mainly because string are inmutable. It doesn't make sense have two copies that represent the same object.

While the article mensioned by Ruggs is "interesting" it should not be used unless very specific circumstances, because it could create more damage than good. You'll be coding to an implementation rather than an specification and the same code could not run the same for instance in JRockit, IBM VM, or other.

2
  • 1
    It makes sense to have two copies if you want to throw away one of them, and it's a lot bigger than the other...
    – Jon Skeet
    Dec 24, 2008 at 7:45
  • 1
    If one is bigger than the other, they would be two different objects in first place isn't? :-/
    – OscarRyz
    Dec 26, 2008 at 17:19

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