I have the following piece of code
public class DriverTester {
public static void main(...){
// test empty constructor
Person p1 = new Person();
System.out.println("p1: " + p1);
}
}
public class Person {
private String name;
// Empty constructor
public Person () {
}
// getter avoided for simplicity
public String toString() {
return "Mr.or Ms. "+this.name;
}
}
It compiles, runs succesfully and shows "Mr or Mrs null". So, that would b e the result of calling the toString
method.
I don't understand the syntax in of the print line method. How is it that simply the name of the object p1
runs a given method. How does it know which method to run? Shouldn't the syntax be
System.out.println("p1: " + p1.getName());
or
System.out.println("p1: " + p1.toString());
Thanks for any clarification
Object
class which has atoString()
method. Theprintln()
method accepts anObject
. So it knows it can call toString() on the argument. Same goes for string concatenation.String
context, as it is in theprintln
, it'stoString()
method is called. You are right in thatSystem.out.println("p1: " + p1.toString())
would be more verbose and correct.