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In Java, it is completely legal to initialize a String array in the following way:

String[] s = {"FOO", "BAR"};

However, when trying to instantiate a class that takes a String array as a parameter, the following piece of code is NOT allowed:

Test t = new Test({"test"});

But this works again:

Test t = new Test(new String[] {"test"});

Can someone explain why this is?

0

3 Answers 3

45
String[] s = {"FOO", "BAR"};  

this is allowed at declaration time only

You can't

String[] s;
s={"FOO", "BAR"};  
5

Because Type[] x = { ... } is an initialization syntax for arrays. The { ... } is interpreted in a specific way only in that specific context.

3

For you want a simple way to pass a String array, I suggest you use varargs

class Test {
   public Test(String...args);
}

// same as new Test(new String[] { "test", "one" })
Test t = new Test("test", "one"); 
2
  • Thanks, but that wasn't really the question and you are also assuming that we can modify the constructor. Dec 14, 2010 at 9:49
  • 1
    @Herminator Usually you can, but not always. Next time you can you will know what you can do. Dec 14, 2010 at 10:14

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