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Java Coding Problems - Second Edition

You're reading from  Java Coding Problems - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837633944
Pages 798 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Anghel Leonard Anghel Leonard
Profile icon Anghel Leonard

Table of Contents (16) Chapters

Preface 1. Text Blocks, Locales, Numbers, and Math 2. Objects, Immutability, Switch Expressions, and Pattern Matching 3. Working with Date and Time 4. Records and Record Patterns 5. Arrays, Collections, and Data Structures 6. Java I/O: Context-Specific Deserialization Filters 7. Foreign (Function) Memory API 8. Sealed and Hidden Classes 9. Functional Style Programming – Extending APIs 10. Concurrency – Virtual Threads and Structured Concurrency 11. Concurrency ‒ Virtual Threads and Structured Concurrency: Diving Deeper 12. Garbage Collectors and Dynamic CDS Archives 13. Socket API and Simple Web Server 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

40. Returning an identity string

So, what’s an identity string? An identity string is a string built from an object without calling the overridden toString() or hashCode(). It is equivalent to the following concatenation:

object.getClass().getName() + "@" 
  + Integer.toHexString(System.identityHashCode(object))

Starting with JDK 19, this string is wrapped in Objects.toIdentityString(Object object). Consider the following class (object):

public class MyPoint {
  private final int x;
  private final int y;
  private final int z;
  ...
  @Override
  public String toString() {
    return "MyPoint{" + "x=" + x + ", y=" + y 
                      + ", z=" + z + '}';
  }  
}

By calling toIdentityString(), we obtain something as follows:

MyPoint p = new MyPoint(1, 2, 3);
// modern.challenge.MyPoint@76ed5528
Objects.toIdentityString(p);

Obviously, the overridden MyPoint.toString() method was not called. If we print out the hash code of p, we get 76ed5528, which is exactly what toIdentityString() returned. Now, let’s override hashCode() as well:

@Override
public int hashCode() {
  int hash = 7;
  hash = 23 * hash + this.x;
  hash = 23 * hash + this.y;
  hash = 23 * hash + this.z;
  return hash;
}

This time, toIdentityString() returns the same thing, while our hashCode() returns 14ef3.

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Java Coding Problems - Second Edition
Published in: Mar 2024 Publisher: Packt ISBN-13: 9781837633944
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