If class B
and class C
extend class A
and I have an object of type B
or C
, how can I determine of which type it is an instance?
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14@starblue Casting would be the first thing that comes to mind. I doubt the instanceof operator would exist if there wasn't any need for it.– arkonSep 14, 2012 at 7:16
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@b1nary.atr0phy wouldn't it be good to use the isntanceof operator first. If there's a cast to an incompatible type, I believe that will result in a ClassCastException– committedandroiderOct 12, 2019 at 17:27
13 Answers
if (obj instanceof C) {
//your code
}
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38It is useful to note the reverse check or how to check if an Object is NOT an instance of a class:
if(!(obj instanceof C))
– DzhuneytOct 15, 2012 at 8:22 -
44I believe getClass() method is the answer to the original question. In this case (obj instanceof A) would also give "true" output but the intent is to find the runtime class of the object in picture. If Parent1 is extended by Child1 and Child2, try the following
code
Child1 child1 = new Child1(); Parent1 parentChild = new Child2(); Child2 child2 = new Child2(); (child1 instanceof Parent1); (child1 instanceof Child1); (parentChild instanceof Child2); (parentChild instanceof Parent1); (parentChild instanceof Child1);code
, it may clear the intent of instanceof. May 20, 2014 at 11:18 -
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3What if I have two classes implementing single interface? How do I distinct exact class of the object?– olyvJan 16, 2015 at 14:17
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3One thing though, it does not work if obj is null. The solution would then be ParentInterface.class.isAssignableFrom(Child.class)– alexbtJul 13, 2016 at 16:24
Use Object.getClass
. It returns the runtime type of the object. Here's how to call it using your example:
class A {}
class B extends A {}
class C extends A {}
class Main {
public static void main(String args[]) {
C c = new C();
Class clazz = c.getClass();
System.out.println(clazz);
}
}
Output:
class C
You can also compare two Class
instances to see if two objects are the same type.
class A {}
class B extends A {}
class C extends A {}
class Main {
public static void main(String args[]) {
B b = new B();
Class c1 = b.getClass();
C c = new C();
Class c2 = c.getClass();
System.out.println(c1 == c2);
}
}
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21
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4
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Multiple right answers were presented, but there are still more methods: Class.isAssignableFrom()
and simply attempting to cast the object (which might throw a ClassCastException
).
Possible ways summarized
Let's summarize the possible ways to test if an object obj
is an instance of type C
:
// Method #1
if (obj instanceof C)
;
// Method #2
if (C.class.isInstance(obj))
;
// Method #3
if (C.class.isAssignableFrom(obj.getClass()))
;
// Method #4
try {
C c = (C) obj;
// No exception: obj is of type C or IT MIGHT BE NULL!
} catch (ClassCastException e) {
}
// Method #5
try {
C c = C.class.cast(obj);
// No exception: obj is of type C or IT MIGHT BE NULL!
} catch (ClassCastException e) {
}
Differences in null
handling
There is a difference in null
handling though:
- In the first 2 methods expressions evaluate to
false
ifobj
isnull
(null
is not instance of anything). - The 3rd method would throw a
NullPointerException
obviously. - The 4th and 5th methods on the contrary accept
null
becausenull
can be cast to any type!
To remember:
null
is not an instance of any type but it can be cast to any type.
Notes
Class.getName()
should not be used to perform an "is-instance-of" test becase if the object is not of typeC
but a subclass of it, it may have a completely different name and package (therefore class names will obviously not match) but it is still of typeC
.- For the same inheritance reason
Class.isAssignableFrom()
is not symmetric:
obj.getClass().isAssignableFrom(C.class)
would returnfalse
if the type ofobj
is a subclass ofC
.
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7This is a really great summary of many of the pitfalls in the different methods. Thanks for such a complete write up!– KelsinAug 8, 2015 at 17:55
You can use:
Object instance = new SomeClass();
instance.getClass().getName(); //will return the name (as String) (== "SomeClass")
instance.getClass(); //will return the SomeClass' Class object
HTH. But I think most of the time it is no good practice to use that for control flow or something similar...
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I used it to create generic logger, So i sent object to the logger, and it logs depending on the class name of the object, rather than giving log tag or log string everytime. thank you– MBHFeb 5, 2016 at 7:23
Any use of any of the methods suggested is considered a code smell which is based in a bad OO design.
If your design is good, you should not find yourself needing to use getClass()
or instanceof
.
Any of the suggested methods will do, but just something to keep in mind, design-wise.
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3Yeah, probably 99% of the uses of getClass and instanceof can be avoided with polymorphic method calls. Feb 12, 2009 at 15:28
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3i am in agreement. in this case i'm working with objects generated from xml following a poorly designed schema which i do not have ownership of.– carrierFeb 12, 2009 at 15:32
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30Not nessecarily. Sometimes separation of interfaces is good. There are times when you want to know if A is a B, but you don't want to make it mandatory that A is a B, as only A is required for most functionality - B has optional functionality. Feb 12, 2009 at 20:33
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8Also, there are times when you need to ensure that the object is of the same class you're comparing with; for instance I like to override Object's equals method when I create my own class. I always verify the object coming in is of the same class. Jun 25, 2012 at 15:17
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66Also, I would say telling people something is bad without explaining exactly why or giving a reference to a paper, book, or any other resource where the issue is explained is considered not constructive. Therefore and knowing that I am in StackOverflow, I don't know why people have upvoted this answer so much. Something is changing here... Sep 22, 2013 at 17:32
We can use reflection in this case
objectName.getClass().getName();
Example:-
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
String name = request.getClass().getName();
}
In this case you will get name of the class which object pass to HttpServletRequest
interface refference variable.
There is also an .isInstance
method on the "Class
" class. if you get an object's class via myBanana.getClass()
you can see if your object myApple
is an instance of the same class as myBanana
via
myBanana.getClass().isInstance(myApple)
checking with isinstance()
would not be enough if you want to know in run time.
use:
if(someObject.getClass().equals(C.class){
// do something
}
I Used Java 8 generics to get what is the object instance at runtime rather than having to use switch case
public <T> void print(T data) {
System.out.println(data.getClass().getName()+" => The data is " + data);
}
pass any type of data and the method will print the type of data you passed while calling it. eg
String str = "Hello World";
int number = 10;
double decimal = 10.0;
float f = 10F;
long l = 10L;
List list = new ArrayList();
print(str);
print(number);
print(decimal);
print(f);
print(l);
print(list);
Following is the output
java.lang.String => The data is Hello World
java.lang.Integer => The data is 10
java.lang.Double => The data is 10.0
java.lang.Float => The data is 10.0
java.lang.Long => The data is 10
java.util.ArrayList => The data is []
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1Using generics here, adds no value. Change the method declaration to
public void print(Object data)
and it will still work exactly the same.– HolgerApr 1, 2022 at 6:57
You can use getSimpleName().
Let's say we have a object: Dog d = new Dog(),
The we can use below statement to get the class name: Dog. E.g.:
d.getClass().getSimpleName(); // return String 'Dog'.
PS: d.getClass() will give you the full name of your object.
your_instance.getClass().getSimpleName()
will gives type name for example: String, Integer, Double, Boolean...
I use the blow function in my GeneralUtils class, check it may be useful
public String getFieldType(Object o) {
if (o == null) {
return "Unable to identify the class name";
}
return o.getClass().getName();
}
use instanceof
operator
to find weather a object is of particular class
or not.
booleanValue = (object instanceof class)
JDK 14 extends the instanceof operator: you can specify a binding variable; if the result of the instanceof operator is true, then the object being tested is assigned to the binding variable.
please visit official Java documentation for more reference.
Sample program to illustrate usage of instanceof
operator
:
import java.util.*;
class Foo{
@Override
public String toString(){
return "Bar";
}
}
class Bar{
public Object reference;
@Override
public String toString(){
return "Foo";
}
}
public class InstanceofUsage{
public static void main(final String ... $){
final List<Object> list = new ArrayList<>();
var out = System.out;
list.add(new String("Foo Loves Bar"));
list.add(33.3);
list.add(404_404);
list.add(new Foo());
list.add(new Bar());
for(final var o : list){
if(o instanceof Bar b && b.reference == null){
out.println("Bar : Null");
}
if(o instanceof String s){
out.println("String : "+s);
}
if(o instanceof Foo f){
out.println("Foo : "+f);
}
}
}
}
output:
$ javac InstanceofUsage.java && java InstanceofUsage
String : Foo Loves Bar
Foo : Bar
Bar : Null