Java automatically interns String literals. This means that in many cases, the == operator appears to work for Strings in the same way that it does for ints or other primitive values.
Since interning is automatic for String literals, the intern()
method is to be used on Strings constructed with new String()
Using your example:
String s1 = "Rakesh";
String s2 = "Rakesh";
String s3 = "Rakesh".intern();
String s4 = new String("Rakesh");
String s5 = new String("Rakesh").intern();
if ( s1 == s2 ){
System.out.println("s1 and s2 are same"); // 1.
}
if ( s1 == s3 ){
System.out.println("s1 and s3 are same" ); // 2.
}
if ( s1 == s4 ){
System.out.println("s1 and s4 are same" ); // 3.
}
if ( s1 == s5 ){
System.out.println("s1 and s5 are same" ); // 4.
}
will return:
s1 and s2 are same
s1 and s3 are same
s1 and s5 are same
In all the cases besides of s4
variable, a value for which was explicitly created using new
operator and where intern
method was not used on it's result, it is a single immutable instance that's being returned JVM's string constant pool.
Refer to JavaTechniques "String Equality and Interning" for more information.
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