JAVA BASICS 1
1. What is the difference between a constructor and a
method?
A constructor is a member function of a class that is used
to create objects of that class. It has the
same name as the class itself, has no return type, and is
invoked using the new operator.
A method is an ordinary member function of a class. It has
its own name, a return type (which may be
void), and is invoked using the dot operator.
2. What is the purpose of garbage collection in Java, and
when is it used?
The purpose of garbage collection is to identify and discard
objects that are no longer needed by a
program so that their resources can be reclaimed and reused.
A Java object is subject to garbage collection when it
becomes unreachable to the program in which it
is used.
3. Describe synchronization in respect to multithreading.
With respect to multithreading, synchronization is the
capability to control the access of multiple
threads to shared resources.
Without synchonization, it is possible for one thread to
modify a shared variable while another thread
is in the process of using or updating same shared variable.
This usually leads to significant errors.
4. What is an abstract class?
Abstract class must be extended/subclassed (to be useful).
It serves as a template. A class that is
abstract may not be instantiated (ie. you may not call its
constructor), abstract class may contain
static data.
Any class with an abstract method is automatically abstract
itself, and must be declared as such. A
class may be declared abstract even if it has no abstract
methods. This prevents it from being
instantiated.
5. What is the difference between an Interface and an
Abstract class?
An abstract class can have instance methods that implement a
default behavior. An Interface can only
declare constants and instance methods, but cannot implement
default behavior and all methods are
implicitly abstract.
An interface has all public members and no implementation.
An abstract class is a class which may
have the usual flavors of class members (private, protected,
etc.), but has some abstract
methods.
6. Explain different way of using thread?
The thread could be implemented by using runnable interface
or by inheriting from the Thread class.
The former is more advantageous, 'cause when you are going
for multiple inheritance, the only
interface can help.
7. What is an Iterator?
Some of the collection classes provide traversal of their
contents via
a java.util.Iterator interface. This interface allows you to
walk through a collection of objects,
operating on each object in turn.
Remember when using Iterators that they contain a snapshot
of the collection at the time the Iterator
was obtained; generally it is not advisable to modify the
collection itself while traversing an Iterator.
8. State the significance of public, private, protected,
default modifiers both singly and in
combination and state the effect of package relationships on
declared items qualified by
these modifiers.
public: Public class is visible in other packages, field is
visible everywhere (class must be public
too)
private : Private variables or methods may be used only by
an instance of the same class that
declares the variable or method, A private feature may only
be accessed by the class that owns the
feature.
protected : Is available to all classes in the same package
and also available to all subclasses of
the class that owns the protected feature. This access is
provided even to subclasses that reside in a
different package from the class that owns the protected
feature.
What you get by default ie, without any access modifier (ie,
public private or protected). It means that
it is visible to all within a particular package.
9. What is static in java?
Static means one per class, not one for each object no
matter how many instance of a class might
exist. This means that you can use them without creating an
instance of a class.Static methods are
implicitly final, because overriding is done based on the
type of the object, and static methods are
attached to a class, not an object.
A static method in a superclass can be shadowed by another
static method in a subclass, as long as
the original method was not declared final. However, you
can't override a static method with a
nonstatic method. In other words, you can't change a static
method into an instance method in a
subclass.
10. What is final class?
A final class can't be extended ie., final class may not be
subclassed. A final method can't be
overridden when its class is inherited. You can't change
value of a final variable (is a constant).
11. What if the main() method is declared as private?
The program compiles properly but at runtime it will give
"main() method not public." message.
12. What if the static modifier is removed from the
signature of the main() method?
Program compiles. But at runtime throws an error
"NoSuchMethodError".
13. What if I write static public void instead of public
static void?
Program compiles and runs properly.
14. What if I do not provide the String array as the
argument to the method?
Program compiles but throws a runtime error
"NoSuchMethodError".
15. What is the first argument of the String array in main()
method?
The String array is empty. It does not have any element.
This is unlike C/C++ where the first element
by default is the program name.
16. If I do not provide any arguments on the command line,
then the String array of main()
method will be empty or null?
It is empty. But not null.
17. How can one prove that the array is not null but empty
using one line of code?
Print args.length. It will print 0. That means it is empty.
But if it would have been null then it would
have thrown a NullPointerException on attempting to print
args.length.
18. What environment variables do I need to set on my
machine in order to be able to run
Java programs?
CLASSPATH and PATH are the two variables.
19. Can an application have multiple classes having main()
method?
Yes it is possible. While starting the application we
mention the class name to be run. The JVM will
look for the Main method only in the class whose name you
have mentioned.
Hence there is not conflict amongst the multiple classes
having main() method.
20. Can I have multiple main() methods in the same class?
No the program fails to compile. The compiler says that the
main() method is already defined in the
class.
21. Do I need to import java.lang package any time? Why ?
No. It is by default loaded internally by the JVM.
22. Can I import same package/class twice? Will the JVM load
the package twice at
runtime?
One can import the same package or same class multiple
times. Neither compiler nor JVM complains
about it. And the JVM will internally load the class only
once no matter how many times you import
the same class.
23. What are Checked and UnChecked Exception?
A checked exception is some subclass of Exception (or
Exception itself), excluding class
RuntimeException and its subclasses. Making an exception
checked forces client programmers to deal
with the possibility that the exception will be thrown.
Example: IOException thrown by java.io.FileInputStream's
read() methodI
Unchecked exceptions are RuntimeException and any of its
subclasses. Class Error and its subclasses
also are unchecked. With an unchecked exception, however,
the compiler doesn't force client
programmers either to catch the exception or declare it in a
throws clause. In fact, client programmers
may not even know that the exception could be thrown.
Example: StringIndexOutOfBoundsException thrown by String's
charAt() methodI Checked
exceptions must be caught at compile time. Runtime
exceptions do not need to be. Errors often
cannot be.
24. What is Overriding?
When a class defines a method using the same name, return
type, and arguments as a method in its
superclass, the method in the class overrides the method in
the superclass.
When the method is invoked for an object of the class, it is
the new definition of the method that is
called, and not the method definition from superclass.
Methods may be overridden to be more public,
not more private.
25. Are the imports checked for validity at compile time?
Example: will the code containing
an import such as java.lang.ABCD compile?
Yes the imports are checked for the semantic validity at
compile time. The code containing above line
of import will not compile. It will throw an error saying,
can not resolve symbol
symbol : class ABCD
location: package io
import java.io.ABCD;
26. Does importing a package imports the subpackages as
well? Example: Does importing
com.MyTest.* also import com.MyTest.UnitTests.*?
No you will have to import the subpackages explicitly.
Importing com.MyTest.* will import classes in
the package MyTest only. It will not import any class in any
of it's subpackage.
27. What is the difference between declaring a variable and
defining a variable?
In declaration we just mention the type of the variable and
it's name. We do not initialize it. But
defining means declaration + initialization.
Example: String s; is just a declaration while String s =
new String ("abcd"); Or String
s = "abcd"; are both definitions.
28. What is the default value of an object reference
declared as an instance variable?
The default value will be null unless we define it
explicitly.
29. Can a top level class be private or protected?
No. A top level class cannot be private or protected. It can
have either "public" or no modifier. If it
does not have a modifier it is supposed to have a default
access.
If a top level class is declared as private the compiler
will complain that the "modifier private is not
allowed here". This means that a top level class can
not be private. Same is the case with protected.
30. What type of parameter passing does Java support?
In Java the arguments are always passed by value.
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