188

Why does the following work? I would expect a NullPointerException to be thrown.

String s = null;
s = s + "hello";
System.out.println(s); // prints "nullhello"
6
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    The type of s is known at compile time and the + operator is overloaded upon the String type (see Jonathans answer, for instance). There are no method calls in the s + "hello" line and thus no chance for an NPE as there is no object receiver (and 'code transformations' must honor this contract). Happy coding.
    – user166390
    Commented Nov 23, 2010 at 21:46
  • 3
    I agree with your line of thinking yavoh. Automatically stringifying null is not a good part of Java. Shame on Sun for doing something so bug-prone.
    – B T
    Commented Sep 29, 2012 at 0:20
  • 1
    @user166390 Great explanation, isn't it, but printing nullhello still remains a counter-intuitive, useless behavior IMO.
    – aliopi
    Commented Oct 8, 2015 at 8:16
  • 1
    I think many developers have misunderstand that if I use a null object, it will crash. In fact, only when you call a null object's property or method, that will crash.
    – Spark.Bao
    Commented Jul 29, 2016 at 3:55
  • 1
    If the wise ones were to convert a null to an empty string "" i could somewhat understand, but convert to a literal 4-character sting "null"?!
    – vesperto
    Commented Feb 6, 2019 at 13:10

5 Answers 5

207

Why must it work?

The JLS 5, Section 15.18.1.1 JLS 8 § 15.18.1 "String Concatenation Operator +", leading to JLS 8, § 5.1.11 "String Conversion", requires this operation to succeed without failure:

...Now only reference values need to be considered. If the reference is null, it is converted to the string "null" (four ASCII characters n, u, l, l). Otherwise, the conversion is performed as if by an invocation of the toString method of the referenced object with no arguments; but if the result of invoking the toString method is null, then the string "null" is used instead.

How does it work?

Let's look at the bytecode! The compiler takes your code:

String s = null;
s = s + "hello";
System.out.println(s); // prints "nullhello"

and compiles it into bytecode as if you had instead written this:

String s = null;
s = new StringBuilder(String.valueOf(s)).append("hello").toString();
System.out.println(s); // prints "nullhello"

(You can do so yourself by using javap -c)

The append methods of StringBuilder all handle null just fine. In this case because null is the first argument, String.valueOf() is invoked instead since StringBuilder does not have a constructor that takes any arbitrary reference type.

If you were to have done s = "hello" + s instead, the equivalent code would be:

s = new StringBuilder("hello").append(s).toString();

where in this case the append method takes the null and then delegates it to String.valueOf().

Note: String concatenation is actually one of the rare places where the compiler gets to decide which optimization(s) to perform. As such, the "exact equivalent" code may differ from compiler to compiler. This optimization is allowed by JLS, Section 15.18.1.2:

To increase the performance of repeated string concatenation, a Java compiler may use the StringBuffer class or a similar technique to reduce the number of intermediate String objects that are created by evaluation of an expression.

The compiler I used to determine the "equivalent code" above was Eclipse's compiler, ecj.

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  • 3
    StringBuilder technically does not use String.valueOf if any append method other than append(Object) (such as append(String) or append(CharSequence)) is called, though null is changed to "null" regardless.
    – ColinD
    Commented Nov 23, 2010 at 20:54
  • Thanks @ColinD, in this case I was wrong since there is no contructor StringBuilder(Object). I've edited my post to directly reflect the bytecode. Commented Nov 23, 2010 at 21:04
  • More explanation for something which behaves unexpectedly wrong. It should print hello.
    – aliopi
    Commented Oct 8, 2015 at 8:19
  • 1
    @Adowrath I changed my mind, you are right, accessing null should throw an NPE. I think printing null is something like a "meta"-behaviour, for example when debugging, when I want to see what's inside that variable, but the default "non-meta" behaviour should be throwing an NPE.
    – aliopi
    Commented Jul 21, 2017 at 10:13
  • 1
    @aliopi: I think they made a defensible decision here, making concatenation null-safe. It might violate the principle of least surprise, but they were probably trying to avoid a plethora of either NPEs or explicit null checks inside of logging and diagnostics code (e.g. logger.print("doing something to " + obj);) Nowadays we have better logging composition than string concatenation, but that wasn't necessarily true in 1995. Commented Jul 21, 2017 at 13:56
28

See section 5.4 and 15.18 of the Java Language specification:

String conversion applies only to the operands of the binary + operator when one of the arguments is a String. In this single special case, the other argument to the + is converted to a String, and a new String which is the concatenation of the two strings is the result of the +. String conversion is specified in detail within the description of the string concatenation + operator.

and

If only one operand expression is of type String, then string conversion is performed on the other operand to produce a string at run time. The result is a reference to a String object (newly created, unless the expression is a compile-time constant expression (§15.28))that is the concatenation of the two operand strings. The characters of the left-hand operand precede the characters of the right-hand operand in the newly created string. If an operand of type String is null, then the string "null" is used instead of that operand.

1
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    Yes! Finally an answer with some nice quotes without jumping on 'StringBuilder' (which is an optimization the compiler may or may not perform).
    – user166390
    Commented Nov 23, 2010 at 21:45
14

The second line is transformed to the following code:

s = (new StringBuilder()).append((String)null).append("hello").toString();

The append methods can handle null arguments.

12

You are not using the "null" and therefore you don't get the exception. If you want the NullPointer, just do

String s = null;
s = s.toString() + "hello";

And I think what you want to do is:

String s = "";
s = s + "hello";
1
  • You ARE using null, you are just not trying to dereference it.
    – GregT
    Commented Apr 16, 2018 at 10:01
7

This is behavior specified in the Java API's String.valueOf(Object) method. When you do concatenation, valueOf is used to get the String representation. There is a special case if the Object is null, in which case the string "null" is used.

public static String valueOf(Object obj)

Returns the string representation of the Object argument.

Parameters: obj - an Object.

Returns:

if the argument is null, then a string equal to "null"; otherwise, the value of obj.toString() is returned.

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