Object Oriented Programming Articles

Page 579 of 589

Immutable String in Java

Sai Nath
Sai Nath
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 830 Views

In Java immutable objects are those whose data can’t be changed or modified (once modified). String class is immutable i.e. once we create a String object its data cannot be modified.

Read More

What is the type of string literals in C and C++?

Lakshmi Srinivas
Lakshmi Srinivas
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 889 Views

In C the type of a string literal is a char[]. In C++, an ordinary string literal has type 'array of n const char'. For example, The type of the string literal "Hello" is "array of 6 const char". It can, however, be converted to a const char* by array-to-pointer conversion.Note that Array-to-pointer conversion results in a pointer to the first element of the array.

Read More

What is the difference between Java and Core Java?

radhakrishna
radhakrishna
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 1K+ Views

Java is a programming language, whereas Core Java is a computing platform. Java Platform Standard Edition is Core Java, which is also called Java SE. The following are the computing following supported by Java, which also has Core Java as its part:Java SE Java Standard Edition used to develop desktop applications. A well-known implementation of Java SE is the Java Development Kit (JDK).Java EE Java Enterprise Edition i.e. Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition or J2EE. Java EE is used for applications running on servers. Java ME Java Micro Edition is used for applications running on mobile phones.Java SE is the Standard Edition and also ...

Read More

Can a Vector contain heterogeneous objects in Java?

Ramu Prasad
Ramu Prasad
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 1K+ Views

Since a vector stores elements in the form of objects, you can store objects of various types (heterogeneous) in it.Example:import java.util.*; class Demo{} public class VectorSample {    public static void main(String args[]) {       Demo obj = new Demo();       Vector v = new Vector(3, 2);       System.out.println("Initial size: " + v.size());       System.out.println("Initial capacity: " + v.capacity());       v.addElement(new Integer(1));       v.addElement(new String("krishna"));       v.addElement(new Float(3.5f));       v.addElement(obj);       System.out.println("Capacity after four additions: " + v.capacity());    } }

Read More

What does the method add(E element) do in java?

Nikitha N
Nikitha N
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 527 Views

The add(E e) method of the java.util.ArrayList class appends the specified element E to the end of the list.Example:import java.util.ArrayList; public class ArrayListDemo {    public static void main(String[] args) {       ArrayList arrlist = new ArrayList(5);       arrlist.add(15);       arrlist.add(20);       arrlist.add(25);       for (Integer number : arrlist) {          System.out.println("Number = " + number);       }    } }Output:Number = 15 Number = 20 Number = 25

Read More

How to synchronize an ArrayList in Java?

Nikitha N
Nikitha N
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 314 Views

The synchronizedList(List list) method of the Collections class accepts a List object and returns a synchronized list backed by the specified list.Example:import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.LinkedHashSet; import java.util.Set; public class ArrayListSample {    public static void main(String[] args){       ArrayList list = new ArrayList();       list.add("JavaFx");       list.add("Java");       list.add("WebGL");       list.add("OpenCV");       Set set = new LinkedHashSet(list);       Collections.synchronizedList(list);       System.out.println(list);    } }Output:[JavaFx, Java, WebGL, OpenCV]

Read More

How to sort an ArrayList in Java in ascending order?

Priya Pallavi
Priya Pallavi
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 733 Views

You can sort an ArrayList using the sort() method of the Collections class this method accepts a list object as a parameter and sorts the contents of it in ascending order.Example:import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.LinkedHashSet; import java.util.Set; public class ArrayListSample {    public static void main(String[] args) {       ArrayList list = new ArrayList();       list.add("JavaFx");       list.add("Java");       list.add("WebGL");       list.add("OpenCV");       Set set = new LinkedHashSet(list);       Collections.sort(list);       System.out.println(list);    } }Output:[Java, JavaFx, OpenCV, WebGL]

Read More

How to sort an ArrayList in Java in descending order?

V Jyothi
V Jyothi
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 7K+ Views

To sort the contents of an ArrayList in descending orderCreate an ArrayList.Sort the contents of the ArrayList using the sort() method of the Collections class.Then, reverse array list using the reverse() method of the Collections class.Example:import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Collections; public class ArrayListSample {    public static void main(String[] args) {       ArrayList list = new ArrayList();       list.add("JavaFx");       list.add("Java");       list.add("WebGL");       list.add("OpenCV");       Collections.sort(list);       System.out.println(list);       Collections.reverse(list);       System.out.println(list);    } }Output:[Java, JavaFx, OpenCV, WebGL] [WebGL, OpenCV, JavaFx, Java]

Read More

What is Java Method Area?

Ayyan
Ayyan
Updated on 30-Jul-2019 2K+ Views

JVM has a method area common across all the threads. It contains per-class elements like constant pool, fields, method local data, method code, constructor codes etc. which are used in class and initialization of objects/interfaces.This method area gets created during JVM start-up. It is generally part of Heap area. It could be of fixed size or vary. Its memory may not be contiguous. JVM implementation can give control to programmer over Method area creation, its sizing etc. If method area memory is not sufficient to satisfy an allocation request then JVM throws OutOfMemoryError.

Read More
Showing 5781–5790 of 5,881 articles
« Prev 1 577 578 579 580 581 589 Next »
Advertisements