This seems to be quite a confusing question. Per the definition, I understand that constructor is a special type of method used to initialize the state of an object and/or assign values to instance variables.
Also someone in Stack Overflow mentioned that constructor returns an object (instance)
of a class, as opposed to what a normal method does/returns?
Despite going through lots of tutorials and reference materials, I couldn't find a concrete reason as to how constructor is able to return a value without the presence of a return statement.
I'm curious to find out the internal working of the entire process.
new
keyword along with a constructor returns the object's reference. Think of it as the constructor setting everything up, and the wordnew
returning the memory location of the set up object. If you ever work with a language that requires manual memory management (like C++) this concept becomes a whole lot clearer.new
"returns" a reference for assignment