I thought Java is assigned by value, not reference?
Answer : Yes, it does - but the value of A is a reference, not a copy of the object itself.
I like to give the following analogy...
Suppose two people both have my address: that's like two variables of type
House
in Java. Now one of them comes and paints my door red. The second person will still see the red door if they visit:House jonsHouse = new House(); // Even the variable jonsHouse is only a reference
House firstAddressCopy = jonsHouse; // Just a copy of the reference
House secondAddressCopy = jonsHouse; // Just a copy of the reference
firstAddressCopy.paintDoor(Color.Red);
Color color = secondAddressCopy.getDoorColor(); // Now color will be red
Basically, remember a few rules and things will become clear:
- The value of an expression in Java is never an object - only ever a reference or a primitive value
- (Corollary of first point) A variable never holds an object - only ever a reference or a primitive value
- Assignment (and argument passing) always copies the value, whether that value is a reference or a primitive value
answered by : Jon Skeet
Source : www.stackoverflow.com
No comments:
Post a Comment