You need to decide exactly what you mean by equality. In particular, you talk about not paying twice in a month - does that mean one transaction should be equal to another if it's in the same month even if it's on a different day? That sounds like quite an odd - and very usage-specific rather than type-specific - idea of equality. Also note that the transaction only has one account number - surely it should have both a "from" and a "to" account, as there could be payments from multiple people to the same account, and there could be payments from one account to multiple accounts in the same month.
So, personally I wouldn't want to override equality in this way, but if you really do have to, it's not too hard... Once you've decided on what consitutes equality, I would implement equals
- at that point hashCode
is usually fairly easy.
I would strongly recommend that you read Josh Bloch's section on equality in Effective Java (second edition) for more details, but equals
would typically look something like this:
@Override public boolean equals(Object other)
{
if (other == null || other.getClass() != this.getClass())
{
return false;
}
BankTransaction otherTransaction = (BankTransaction) other;
return accountNo == otherTransaction.accountNo
&& transactionAmount == otherTransaction.transactionAmount
&& // etc;
}
Note that for any field which is a reference type, you need to determine what sort of equality you want to apply there - often you'll want to call equals
instead of just using the reference comparison provided by ==
.