You're adding two java.lang.String
's for which class Sun/Oracle have already supplied fitting .hashCode()
and .equals()
methods for you :-)
Note: It's not the collections that need the equals and hash methods - it's the objects you put into them!
If you were to add YourOwnClass
objects to a JDK collection, you must override both these methods sensibly. Consider this, where YourOwnClass
falls back to java.lang.Object
's implementations of the methods in point:
class YourOwnClass
{
String a;
public YourOwnClass(String a) { this.a = a; }
}
public void testYourOwnClass() throws Exception
{
Set<YourOwnClass> set = new HashSet<YourOwnClass>();
System.out.println( set.add( new YourOwnClass( "b" ) ) );
System.out.println( set.add( new YourOwnClass( "b" ) ) );
}
This will print
true
true
even though we could argue that the two YourOwnClass
objects added should probably be considered identical from a semantic viewpoint.
Then, modify YourOwnClass
as follows, and try again.
class YourOwnClass
{
String a;
public YourOwnClass(String a) { this.a = a; }
@Override public int hashCode() { return a.hashCode(); }
@Override public boolean equals(Object obj) { return a.equals( ((YourOwnClass)obj).a ); }
}
Voila - "true false" this time!
Cheers,
String
does overridehashCode
.