Q: What is the difference between an Interface and an Abstract class?
A: 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.
Abstract class can not be final.
Abstract class Can not instantiated.
.
A: 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.
A: 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.
A: 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.
A: Pass By Reference means the passing the address itself rather than passing the value. Passby Value means passing a copy of the value to be passed.
A: Map is Interface and Hashmap is class that implements that.
A: The HashMap class is roughly equivalent to Hashtable, except that it is unsynchronized and permits nulls. (HashMap allows null values as key and value whereas Hashtable doesnt allow). HashMap does not guarantee that the order of the map will remain constant over time. HashMap is unsynchronized and Hashtable is synchronized.
A: Vector is synchronized whereas arraylist is not.
A: AWT are heavy-weight componenets. Swings are light-weight components. Hence swing works faster than AWT.
A: 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.
A: 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.
A: 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.
default :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.
A: 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.
A: 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.
A: 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).
A: The program compiles properly but at runtime it will give "Main method not public." message.
A: Program compiles. But at runtime throws an error "NoSuchMethodError".
A: Program compiles and runs properly.
A: Program compiles but throws a runtime error "NoSuchMethodError".
A: 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.
A: It is empty. But not null.
A: 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.
A: CLASSPATH and PATH are the two variables.
A: 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.
A: No the program fails to compile. The compiler says that the main method is already defined in the class.
A: No. It is by default loaded internally by the JVM.
A: One can import the same package or same class multiple times. Neither compiler nor JVM complains abt it. And the JVM will internally load the class only once no matter how many times you import the same class.
A: 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. eg, IOException thrown by java.io.FileInputStream's read() method•
Q: What are Checked and UnChecked Exception?
Q: Can I import same package/class twice? Will the JVM load the package twice at runtime?
Q: Do I need to import java.lang package any time? Why ?
Q: Can I have multiple main methods in the same class?
Q: Can an application have multiple classes having main method?
Q: What environment variables do I need to set on my machine in order to be able to run Java programs?
Q: How can one prove that the array is not null but empty using one line of code?
Q: If I do not provide any arguments on the command line, then the String array of Main method will be empty or null?
Q: What is the first argument of the String array in main method?
Q: What if I do not provide the String array as the argument to the method?
Q: What if I write static public void instead of public static void?
Q: What if the static modifier is removed from the signature of the main method?
Q: What if the main method is declared as private?
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. eg, StringIndexOutOfBoundsException thrown by String's charAt() method• Checked exceptions must be caught at compile time. Runtime exceptions do not need to be. Errors often cannot be.
Q: What is Overriding?
A: 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.
Q: What are different types of inner classes?
A: Nested top-level classes, Member classes, Local classes, Anonymous classes
Nested top-level classes- If you declare a class within a class and specify the static modifier, the compiler treats the class just like any other top-level class.
Any class outside the declaring class accesses the nested class with the declaring class name acting similarly to a package. eg, outer. inner. Top-level inner classes implicitly have access only to static variables. There can also be inner interfaces. All of these are of the nested top-level variety.
Member classes - Member inner classes are just like other member methods and member variables and access to the member class is restricted, just like methods and variables. This means public member class acts similarly to a nested top-level class. The primary difference between member classes and nested top-level classes is that member classes have access to the specific instance of the enclosing class.
Local classes - Local classes are like local variables, specific to a block of code. Their visibility is only within the block of their declaration. In order for the class to be useful beyond the declaration block, it would need to implement a
more publicly available interface.Because local classes are not members, the modifiers public, protected, private, and static are not usable.
Anonymous classes - Anonymous inner classes extend local inner classes one level further. As anonymous classes have no name, you cannot provide a constructor.
Q: Are the imports checked for validity at compile time? e.g. will the code containing an import such as java.lang.ABCD compile?
A: 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;
Q: Does importing a package imports the subpackages as well? e.g. Does importing com.MyTest.* also import com.MyTest.UnitTests.*?
A: 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.
Q: What is the difference between declaring a variable and defining a variable?
A: In declaration we just mention the type of the variable and it's name. We do not initialize it. But defining means declaration + initialization.
e.g String s; is just a declaration while String s = new String ("abcd"); Or String s = "abcd"; are both definitions.
Q: What is the default value of an object reference declared as an instance variable?
A: null unless we define it explicitly.
Q: Can a top level class be private or protected?
A: No. A top level class can not 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.
Q: What type of parameter passing does Java support?
A: In Java the arguments are always passed by value .
Q: Primitive data types are passed by reference or pass by value?
A: Primitive data types are passed by value.
Q: Objects are passed by value or by reference?
A: Java only supports pass by value. With objects, the object reference itself is passed by value and so both the original reference and parameter copy both refer to the same object .
Q: What is serialization?
A: Serialization is a mechanism by which you can save the state of an object by converting it to a byte stream.
Q: How do I serialize an object to a file?
A: The class whose instances are to be serialized should implement an interface Serializable. Then you pass the instance to the ObjectOutputStream which is connected to a fileoutputstream. This will save the object to a file.
Q: Which methods of Serializable interface should I implement?
A: The serializable interface is an empty interface, it does not contain any methods. So we do not implement any methods.
Q: How can I customize the seralization process? i.e. how can one have a control over the serialization process?
A: Yes it is possible to have control over serialization process. The class should implement Externalizable interface. This interface contains two methods namely readExternal and writeExternal. You should implement these methods and write the logic for customizing the serialization process.
Q: What is the common usage of serialization?
A: Whenever an object is to be sent over the network, objects need to be serialized. Moreover if the state of an object is to be saved, objects need to be serilazed.
Q: What is Externalizable interface?
A: Externalizable is an interface which contains two methods readExternal and writeExternal. These methods give you a control over the serialization mechanism. Thus if your class implements this interface, you can customize the serialization process by implementing these methods.
Q: When you serialize an object, what happens to the object references included in the object?
A: The serialization mechanism generates an object graph for serialization. Thus it determines whether the included object references are serializable or not. This is a recursive process. Thus when an object is serialized, all the included objects are also serialized along with the original object.
Q: What one should take care of while serializing the object?
A: One should make sure that all the included objects are also serializable. If any of the objects is not serializable then it throws a NotSerializableException.
Q: What happens to the static fields of a class during serialization?
A: There are three exceptions in which serialization does not necessarily read and write to the stream. These are
1. Serialization ignores static fields, because they are not part of ay particular state .
2. Base class fields are only hendled if the base class itself is serializable.
3. Transient fields.
Q: Does Java provide any construct to find out the size of an object?
A: No there is not sizeof operator in Java. So there is not direct way to determine the size of an object directly in Java.
Q: Give a simplest way to find out the time a method takes for execution without using any profiling tool?
A: Read the system time just before the method is invoked and immediately after method returns. Take the time difference, which will give you the time taken by a method for execution.
To put it in code...
long start = System.currentTimeMillis ();
method ();
long end = System.currentTimeMillis ();
System.out.println ("Time taken for execution is " + (end - start));
Remember that if the time taken for execution is too small, it might show that it is taking zero milliseconds for execution. Try it on a method which is big enough, in the sense the one which is doing considerable amout of processing.
Q: What are wrapper classes?
A: Java provides specialized classes corresponding to each of the primitive data types. These are called wrapper classes. They are e.g. Integer, Character, Double etc.
Q: Why do we need wrapper classes?
A: It is sometimes easier to deal with primitives as objects. Moreover most of the collection classes store objects and not primitive data types. And also the wrapper classes provide many utility methods also. Because of these resons we need wrapper classes. And since we create instances of these classes we can store them in any of the collection classes and pass them around as a collection. Also we can pass them around as method parameters where a method expects an object.
Q: What are checked exceptions?
A: Checked exception are those which the Java compiler forces you to catch. e.g. IOException are checked Exceptions.
Q: What are runtime exceptions?
A: Runtime exceptions are those exceptions that are thrown at runtime because of either wrong input data or because of wrong business logic etc. These are not checked by the compiler at compile time.
Q: What is the difference between error and an exception?
A: An error is an irrecoverable condition occurring at runtime. Such as OutOfMemory error. These JVM errors and you can not repair them at runtime. While exceptions are conditions that occur because of bad input etc. e.g. FileNotFoundException will be thrown if the specified file does not exist. Or a NullPointerException will take place if you try using a null reference. In most of the cases it is possible to recover from an exception (probably by giving user a feedback for entering proper values etc.).
Q: How to create custom exceptions?
A: Your class should extend class Exception, or some more specific type thereof.
Q: If I want an object of my class to be thrown as an exception object, what should I do?
A: The class should extend from Exception class. Or you can extend your class from some more precise exception type also.
Q: If my class already extends from some other class what should I do if I want an instance of my class to be thrown as an exception object?
A: One can not do anytihng in this scenarion. Because Java does not allow multiple inheritance and does not provide any exception interface as well.
Q: How does an exception permeate through the code?
A: An unhandled exception moves up the method stack in search of a matching When an exception is thrown from a code which is wrapped in a try block followed by one or more catch blocks, a search is made for matching catch block. If a matching type is found then that block will be invoked. If a matching type is not found then the exception moves up the method stack and reaches the caller method. Same procedure is repeated if the caller method is included in a try catch block. This process continues until a catch block handling the appropriate type of exception is found. If it does not find such a block then finally the program terminates.
Q: What are the different ways to handle exceptions?
A: There are two ways to handle exceptions,
1. By wrapping the desired code in a try block followed by a catch block to catch the exceptions. and
2. List the desired exceptions in the throws clause of the method and let the caller of the method handle those exceptions.
Q: What is the basic difference between the 2 approaches to exception handling.
1> try catch block and
2> specifying the candidate exceptions in the throws clause?
When should you use which approach?
A: In the first approach as a programmer of the method, you urself are dealing with the exception. This is fine if you are in a best position to decide should be done in case of an exception. Whereas if it is not the responsibility of the method to deal with it's own exceptions, then do not use this approach. In this case use the second approach. In the second approach we are forcing the caller of the method to catch the exceptions, that the method is likely to throw. This is often the approach library creators use. They list the exception in the throws clause and we must catch them. You will find the same approach throughout the java libraries we use.
Q: Is it necessary that each try block must be followed by a catch block?
A: It is not necessary that each try block must be followed by a catch block. It should be followed by either a catch block OR a finally block. And whatever exceptions are likely to be thrown should be declared in the throws clause of the method.
Q: If I write return at the end of the try block, will the finally block still execute?
A: Yes even if you write return as the last statement in the try block and no exception occurs, the finally block will execute. The finally block will execute and then the control return.
Q: If I write System.exit (0); at the end of the try block, will the finally block still execute?
A: No in this case the finally block will not execute because when you say System.exit (0); the control immediately goes out of the program, and thus finally never executes.
Q: How are Observer and Observable used?
A: Objects that subclass the Observable class maintain a list of observers. When an Observable object is updated it invokes the update() method of each of its observers to notify the observers that it has changed state. The Observer interface is implemented by objects that observe Observable objects.
Q: What is synchronization and why is it important?
A: With respect to multithreading, synchronization is the capability to control
the access of multiple threads to shared resources. Without synchronization, it is possible for one thread to modify a shared object while another thread is in the process of using or updating that object's value. This often leads to significant errors.
Q: How does Java handle integer overflows and underflows?
A: It uses those low order bytes of the result that can fit into the size of the type allowed by the operation.
Q: Does garbage collection guarantee that a program will not run out of memory?
A: Garbage collection does not guarantee that a program will not run out of memory. It is possible for programs to use up memory resources faster than they are garbage collected. It is also possible for programs to create objects that are not subject to garbage collection
.
Q: What is the difference between preemptive scheduling and time slicing?
A: Under preemptive scheduling, the highest priority task executes until it enters the waiting or dead states or a higher priority task comes into existence. Under time slicing, a task executes for a predefined slice of time and then reenters the pool of ready tasks. The scheduler then determines which task should execute next, based on priority and other factors.
Q: When a thread is created and started, what is its initial state?
A: A thread is in the ready state after it has been created and started.
Q: What is the purpose of finalization?
A: The purpose of finalization is to give an unreachable object the opportunity to perform any cleanup processing before the object is garbage collected.
Q: What is the Locale class?
A: The Locale class is used to tailor program output to the conventions of a particular geographic, political, or cultural region.
Q: What is the difference between a while statement and a do statement?
A: A while statement checks at the beginning of a loop to see whether the next loop iteration should occur. A do statement checks at the end of a loop to see whether the next iteration of a loop should occur. The do statement will always execute the body of a loop at least once.
Q: What is the difference between static and non-static variables?
A: A static variable is associated with the class as a whole rather than with specific instances of a class. Non-static variables take on unique values with each object instance.
Q: How are this() and super() used with constructors?
A: This() is used to invoke a constructor of the same class. super() is used to invoke a superclass constructor.
Q: What are synchronized methods and synchronized statements?
A: Synchronized methods are methods that are used to control access to an object. A thread only executes a synchronized method after it has acquired the lock for the method's object or class. Synchronized statements are similar to synchronized methods. A synchronized statement can only be executed after a thread has acquired the lock for the object or class referenced in the synchronized statement.
Q: What is daemon thread and which method is used to create the daemon thread?
A: Daemon thread is a low priority thread which runs intermittently in the back ground doing the garbage collection operation for the java runtime system. setDaemon method is used to create a daemon thread.
Q: Can applets communicate with each other?
A: At this point in time applets may communicate with other applets running in the same virtual machine. If the applets are of the same class, they can communicate via shared static variables. If the applets are of different classes, then each will need a reference to the same class with static variables. In any case the basic idea is to pass the information back and forth through a static variable.
An applet can also get references to all other applets on the same page using the getApplets() method of java.applet.AppletContext. Once you get the reference to an applet, you can communicate with it by using its public members.
It is conceivable to have applets in different virtual machines that talk to a server somewhere on the Internet and store any data that needs to be serialized there. Then, when another applet needs this data, it could connect to this same server. Implementing this is non-trivial.
Q: What are the steps in the JDBC connection?
A: While making a JDBC connection we go through the following steps :
Step 1 : Register the database driver by using :
Class.forName(\" driver classs for that specific database\" );
Step 2 : Now create a database connection using :
Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection(url,username,password);
Step 3: Now Create a query using :
Statement stmt = Connection.Statement(\"select * from TABLE NAME\");
Step 4 : Exceute the query :
stmt.exceuteUpdate();
Q: How does a try statement determine which catch clause should be used to handle an exception?
A: When an exception is thrown within the body of a try statement, the catch clauses of the try statement are examined in the order in which they appear. The first catch clause that is capable of handling the exceptionis executed. The remaining catch clauses are ignored.
Q: Can an unreachable object become reachable again?
A: An unreachable object may become reachable again. This can happen when the object's finalize() method is invoked and the object performs an operation which causes it to become accessible to reachable objects.
Q: What method must be implemented by all threads?
A: All tasks must implement the run() method, whether they are a subclass of Thread or implement the Runnable interface.
Q: What is Externalizable?
A: Externalizable is an Interface that extends Serializable Interface. And sends data into Streams in Compressed Format. It has two methods, writeExternal(ObjectOuput out) and readExternal(ObjectInput in)
Q: What modifiers are allowed for methods in an Interface?
A: Only public and abstract modifiers are allowed for methods in interfaces.
Q: What are some alternatives to inheritance?
A: Delegation is an alternative to inheritance. Delegation means that you include an instance of another class as an instance variable, and forward messages to the instance. It is often safer than inheritance because it forces you to think about each message you forward, because the instance is of a known class, rather than a new class, and because it doesn't force you to accept all the methods of the super class: you can provide only the methods that really make sense. On the other hand, it makes you write more code, and it is harder to re-use (because it is not a subclass).
Q: What does it mean that a method or field is "static"?
A: Static variables and methods are instantiated only once per class. In other words they are class variables, not instance variables. If you change the value of a static variable in a particular object, the value of that variable changes for all instances of that class.
Static methods can be referenced with the name of the class rather than the name of a particular object of the class (though that works too). That's how library methods like System.out.println() work out is a static field in the java.lang.System class.
Q: What is the catch or declare rule for method declarations?
A: If a checked exception may be thrown within the body of a method, the method must either catch the exception or declare it in its throws clause.
Q: Is Empty .java file a valid source file?
A: Yes, an empty .java file is a perfectly valid source file.
Q: Can a .java file contain more than one java classes?
A: Yes, a .java file contain more than one java classes, provided at the most one of them is a public class.
Q: Is String a primitive data type in Java?
A: No String is not a primitive data type in Java, even though it is one of the most extensively used object. Strings in Java are instances of String class defined in java.lang package.
Q: Is main a keyword in Java?
A: No, main is not a keyword in Java.
Q: Is next a keyword in Java?
A: No, next is not a keyword.
Q: Is delete a keyword in Java?
A: No, delete is not a keyword in Java. Java does not make use of explicit destructors the way C++ does.
Q: Is exit a keyword in Java?
A: No. To exit a program explicitly you use exit method in System object.
Q: What happens if you dont initialize an instance variable of any of the primitive types in Java?
A: Java by default initializes it to the default value for that primitive type. Thus an int will be initialized to 0, a boolean will be initialized to false.
Q: What will be the initial value of an object reference which is defined as an instance variable?
A: The object references are all initialized to null in Java. However in order to do anything useful with these references, you must set them to a valid object, else you will get NullPointerExceptions everywhere you try to use such default initialized references.
Q: What are the different scopes for Java variables?
A: The scope of a Java variable is determined by the context in which the variable is declared. Thus a java variable can have one of the three scopes at any given point in time.
1. Instance : - These are typical object level variables, they are initialized to default values at the time of creation of object, and remain accessible as long as the object accessible.
2. Local : - These are the variables that are defined within a method. They remain accessbile only during the course of method execution. When the method finishes execution, these variables fall out of scope.
3. Static: - These are the class level variables. They are initialized when the class is loaded in JVM for the first time and remain there as long as the class remains loaded. They are not tied to any particular object instance.
Q: What is the default value of the local variables?
A: The local variables are not initialized to any default value, neither primitives nor object references. If you try to use these variables without initializing them explicitly, the java compiler will not compile the code. It will complain abt the local varaible not being initilized..
Q: How many objects are created in the following piece of code?
MyClass c1, c2, c3;
c1 = new MyClass ();
c3 = new MyClass ();
A: Only 2 objects are created, c1 and c3. The reference c2 is only declared and not initialized.
Q: Can a public class MyClass be defined in a source file named YourClass.java?
A: No the source file name, if it contains a public class, must be the same as the public class name itself with a .java extension.
Q: Can main method be declared final?
A: Yes, the main method can be declared final, in addition to being public static.
Q: What will be the output of the following statement?
System.out.println ("1" + 3);
A: It will print 13.
Q: What will be the default values of all the elements of an array defined as an instance variable?
A: If the array is an array of primitive types, then all the elements of the array will be initialized to the default value corresponding to that primitive type. e.g. All the elements of an array of int will be initialized to 0, while that of boolean type will be initialized to false. Whereas if the array is an array of references (of any type), all the elements will be initialized to null.
Question: How could Java classes direct program messages to the system console, but error messages, say to a file?
Answer: The class System has a variable out that represents the standard output, and the variable err that represents the standard error device. By default, they both point at the system console. This how the standard output could be re-directed:
Stream st = new Stream(new FileOutputStream("output.txt")); System.setErr(st); System.setOut(st);
Question: What's the difference between an interface and an abstract class?
Answer: An abstract class may contain code in method bodies, which is not allowed in an interface. With abstract classes, you have to inherit your class from it and Java does not allow multiple inheritance. On the other hand, you can implement multiple interfaces in your class.
Question: Why would you use a synchronized block vs. synchronized method?
Answer: Synchronized blocks place locks for shorter periods than synchronized methods.
Question: Explain the usage of the keyword transient?
Answer: This keyword indicates that the value of this member variable does not have to be serialized with the object. When the class will be de-serialized, this variable will be initialized with a default value of its data type (i.e. zero for integers).
Question: How can you force garbage collection?
Answer: You can't force GC, but could request it by calling System.gc(). JVM does not guarantee that GC will be started immediately.
Question: How do you know if an explicit object casting is needed?
Answer: If you assign a superclass object to a variable of a subclass's data type, you need to do explicit casting. For example:
Object a; Customer b; b = (Customer) a;
When you assign a subclass to a variable having a supeclass type, the casting is performed automatically.
Question: What's the difference between the methods sleep() and wait()
Answer: The code sleep(1000); puts thread aside for exactly one second. The code wait(1000), causes a wait of up to one second. A thread could stop waiting earlier if it receives the notify() or notifyAll() call. The method wait() is defined in the class Object and the method sleep() is defined in the class Thread.
• Wait can be called only from synchronize
• Wait be release lock
• Object class method while sleep in thread method
Question: Can you write a Java class that could be used both as an applet as well as an application?
Answer: Yes. Add a main() method to the applet.
Question: What's the difference between constructors and other methods?
Answer: Constructors must have the same name as the class and can not return a value. They are only called once while regular methods could be called many times.
Question: Can you call one constructor from another if a class has multiple constructors
Answer: Yes. Use this() syntax.
Question: Explain the usage of Java packages.
Answer: This is a way to organize files when a project consists of multiple modules. It also helps resolve naming conflicts when different packages have classes with the same names. Packages access level also allows you to protect data from being used by the non-authorized classes.
Question: If a class is located in a package, what do you need to change in the OS environment to be able to use it?
Answer: You need to add a directory or a jar file that contains the package directories to the CLASSPATH environment variable. Let's say a class Employee belongs to a package com.xyz.hr; and is located in the file c:\dev\com\xyz\hr\Employee.java. In this case, you'd need to add c:\dev to the variable CLASSPATH. If this class contains the method main(), you could test it from a command prompt window as follows:
c:\>java com.xyz.hr.Employee
Question: What's the difference between J2SDK 1.5 and J2SDK 5.0?
Answer: There's no difference, Sun Microsystems just re-branded this version.
Question: What would you use to compare two String variables - the operator == or the method equals()?
Answer: I'd use the method equals() to compare the values of the Strings and the == to check if two variables point at the same instance of a String object.
Question: Does it matter in what order catch statements for FileNotFoundException and IOExceptipon are written?
Answer: Yes, it does. The FileNoFoundException is inherited from the IOException. Exception's subclasses have to be caught first.
Question: Can an inner class declared inside of a method access local variables of this method?
Answer: It's possible if these variables are final.
Question: What can go wrong if you replace && with & in the following code: String a=null; if (a!=null && a.length()>10) {...}
Answer: A single ampersand here would lead to a NullPointerException.
Question: What's the main difference between a Vector and an ArrayList
Answer: Java Vector class is internally synchronized and ArrayList is not.
Question: When should the method invokeLater()be used?
Answer: This method is used to ensure that Swing components are updated through the event-dispatching thread.
Question: How can a subclass call a method or a constructor defined in a superclass?
Answer: Use the following syntax: super.myMethod(); To call a constructor of the superclass, just write super(); in the first line of the subclass's constructor.
Question: What's the difference between a queue and a stack?
Answer: Stacks works by last-in-first-out rule (LIFO), while queues use the FIFO rule
Question: You can create an abstract class that contains only abstract methods. On the other hand, you can create an interface that declares the same methods. So can you use abstract classes instead of interfaces?
Answer: Sometimes. But your class may be a descendent of another class and in this case the interface is your only option.
Question: What comes to mind when you hear about a young generation in Java?
Answer: Garbage collection.
Question: What comes to mind when someone mentions a shallow copy in Java?
Answer: Object cloning.
Question: If you're overriding the method equals() of an object, which other method you might also consider?
Answer: hashCode()
Question: You are planning to do an indexed search in a list of objects. Which of the two Java collections should you use: ArrayList or LinkedList?
Answer: ArrayList
Question: How would you make a copy of an entire Java object with its state?
Answer: Have this class implement Cloneable interface and call its method clone().
Question: How can you minimize the need of garbage collection and make the memory use more effective?
Answer: Use object pooling and weak object references.
Question: There are two classes: A and B. The class B need to inform a class A when some important event has happened. What Java technique would you use to implement it?
Answer: If these classes are threads I'd consider notify() or notifyAll(). For regular classes you can use the Observer interface.
Question: What access level do you need to specify in the class declaration to ensure that only classes from the same directory can access it?
Answer: You do not need to specify any access level, and Java will use a default package access level .
Question: When you declare a method as abstract method ?
Answer: When i want child class to implement the behavior of the method.
Question: Can I call a abstract method from a non abstract method ?
Answer: Yes, We can call a abstract method from a Non abstract method in a Java abstract class
Question: What is the difference between an Abstract class and Interface in Java ? or can you explain when you use Abstract classes ?
Answer: Abstract classes let you define some behaviors; they force your subclasses to provide others. These abstract classes will provide the basic funcationality of your applicatoin, child class which inherited this class will provide the funtionality of the abstract methods in abstract class. When base class calls this method, Java calls the method defined by the child class.
• An Interface can only declare constants and instance methods, but cannot implement default behavior.
• Interfaces provide a form of multiple inheritance. A class can extend only one other class.
• Interfaces are limited to public methods and constants with no implementation. Abstract classes can have a partial implementation, protected parts, static methods, etc.
• A Class may implement several interfaces. But in case of abstract class, a class may extend only one abstract class.
• Interfaces are slow as it requires extra indirection to find corresponding method in the actual class. Abstract classes are fast.
Question: What is user-defined exception in java ?
Answer: User-defined expections are the exceptions defined by the application developer which are errors related to specific application. Application Developer can define the user defined exception by inherite the Exception class as shown below. Using this class we can throw new exceptions.
Java Example : public class noFundException extends Exception { } Throw an exception using a throw statement: public class Fund { ... public Object getFunds() throws noFundException { if (Empty()) throw new noFundException(); ... } } User-defined exceptions should usually be checked.
Question: What is the difference between checked and Unchecked Exceptions in Java ?
Answer: All predefined exceptions in Java are either a checked exception or an unchecked exception. Checked exceptions must be caught using try .. catch() block or we should throw the exception using throws clause. If you dont, compilation of program will fail.
Java Exception Hierarchy +--------+ | Object | +--------+ | | +-----------+ | Throwable | +-----------+ / \ / \ +-------+ +-----------+ | Error | | Exception | +-------+ +-----------+ / | \ / | \ \________/ \______/ \ +------------------+ unchecked checked | RuntimeException | +------------------+ / | | \ \_________________/ unchecked
Question: Explain garbage collection ?
Answer: Garbage collection is an important part of Java's security strategy. Garbage collection is also called automatic memory management as JVM automatically removes the unused variables/objects from the memory. The name "garbage collection" implies that objects that are no longer needed by the program are "garbage" and can be thrown away. A more accurate and up-to-date metaphor might be "memory recycling." When an object is no longer referenced by the program, the heap space it occupies must be recycled so that the space is available for subsequent new objects. The garbage collector must somehow determine which objects are no longer referenced by the program and make available the heap space occupied by such unreferenced objects. In the process of freeing unreferenced objects, the garbage collector must run any finalizers of objects being freed.
Question: How you can force the garbage collection ?
Answer: Garbage collection automatic process and can't be forced. We can call garbage collector in Java by calling System.gc() and Runtime.gc(), JVM tries to recycle the unused objects, but there is no guarantee when all the objects will garbage collected.
Question: What are the field/method access levels (specifiers) and class access levels ?
Answer: Each field and method has an access level:
• private: accessible only in this class
• (package): accessible only in this package
• protected: accessible only in this package and in all subclasses of this class
• public: accessible everywhere this class is available
Similarly, each class has one of two possible access levels:
• (package): class objects can only be declared and manipulated by code in this package
• public: class objects can be declared and manipulated by code in any package
Question: What are the static fields & static Methods ?
Answer: If a field or method defined as a static, there is only one copy for entire class, rather than one copy for each instance of class. static method cannot accecss non-static field or call non-static method
Example Java Code
static int counter = 0;
A public static field or method can be accessed from outside the class using either the usual notation:
Java-class-object.field-or-method-name
or using the class name instead of the name of the class object:
Java- class-name.field-or-method-name
Question: What are the Final fields & Final Methods ?
Answer: Fields and methods can also be declared final. A final method cannot be overridden in a subclass. A final field is like a constant: once it has been given a value, it cannot be assigned to again.
Java Code
private static final int MAXATTEMPTS = 10;
Question: Describe the wrapper classes in Java ?
Answer: Wrapper class is wrapper around a primitive data type. An instance of a wrapper class contains, or wraps, a primitive value of the corresponding type.
Following table lists the primitive types and the corresponding wrapper classes:
Primitive Wrapper
boolean java.lang.Boolean
byte java.lang.Byte
char java.lang.Character
double java.lang.Double
float java.lang.Float
int java.lang.Integer
long java.lang.Long
short java.lang.Short
void java.lang.Void
Question: What are different types of inner classes ?
Answer: Inner classes nest within other classes. A normal class is a direct member of a package. Inner classes, which became available with Java 1.1, are four types
• Static member classes
• Member classes
• Local classes
• Anonymous classes
Static member classes - a static member class is a static member of a class. Like any other static method, a static member class has access to all static methods of the parent, or top-level, class.
Member Classes - a member class is also defined as a member of a class. Unlike the static variety, the member class is instance specific and has access to any and all methods and members, even the parent's this reference.
Local Classes - Local Classes declared within a block of code and these classes are visible only within the block.
Anonymous Classes - These type of classes does not have any name and its like a local class
Java Anonymous Class Example public class SomeGUI extends JFrame { ... button member declarations ... protected void buildGUI() { button1 = new JButton(); button2 = new JButton(); ... button1.addActionListener( new java.awt.event.ActionListener() <------ Anonymous Class { public void actionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent e) { // do something } } ); Question: What are the uses of Serialization? Answer: In some types of applications you have to write the code to serialize objects, but in many cases serialization is performed behind the scenes by various server-side containers. These are some of the typical uses of serialization: • To persist data for future use. • To send data to a remote computer using such client/server Java technologies as RMI or socket programming. • To "flatten" an object into array of bytes in memory. • To exchange data between applets and servlets. • To store user session in Web applications. • To activate/passivate enterprise java beans. • To send objects between the servers in a cluster. Question: what is a collection ? Answer: Collection is a group of objects. java.util package provides important types of collections. There are two fundamental types of collections they are Collection and Map. Collection types hold a group of objects, Eg. Lists and Sets where as Map types hold group of objects as key, value pairs Eg. HashMap and Hashtable.
Question: For concatenation of strings, which method is good, StringBuffer or String ?
Answer: StringBuffer is faster than String for concatenation. Question: What is Runnable interface ? Are there any other ways to make a java program as multithred java program? Answer: There are two ways to create new kinds of threads: - Define a new class that extends the Thread class - Define a new class that implements the Runnable interface, and pass an object of that class to a Thread's constructor. - An advantage of the second approach is that the new class can be a subclass of any class, not just of the Thread class. Here is a very simple example just to illustrate how to use the second approach to creating threads: class myThread implements Runnable { public void run() { System.out.println("I'm running!"); } } public class tstRunnable { public static void main(String[] args) { myThread my1 = new myThread(); myThread my2 = new myThread(); new Thread(my1).start(); new Thread(my2).start(); }
Question: How can i tell what state a thread is in ?
Answer: Prior to Java 5, isAlive() was commonly used to test a threads state. If isAlive() returned false the thread was either new or terminated but there was simply no way to differentiate between the two. Starting with the release of Tiger (Java 5) you can now get what state a thread is in by using the getState() method which returns an Enum of Thread.States. A thread can only be in one of the following states at a given point in time. NEW A Fresh thread that has not yet started to execute. RUNNABLE A thread that is executing in the Java virtual machine. BLOCKED A thread that is blocked waiting for a monitor lock. WAITING A thread that is wating to be notified by another thread. TIMED_WAITING A thread that is wating to be notified by another thread for a specific amount of time TERMINATED A thread whos run method has ended. The folowing code prints out all thread states. public class ThreadStates{ public static void main(String[] args){ Thread t = new Thread(); Thread.State e = t.getState(); Thread.State[] ts = e.values(); for(int i = 0; i < ts.length; i++){ System.out.println(ts[i]); } } }
Question: What methods java providing for Thread communications ?
Answer: Java provides three methods that threads can use to communicate with each other: wait, notify, and notifyAll. These methods are defined for all Objects (not just Threads). The idea is that a method called by a thread may need to wait for some condition to be satisfied by another thread; in that case, it can call the wait method, which causes its thread to wait until another thread calls notify or notifyAll. Question: What is the difference between notify and notify All methods ? Answer: A call to notify causes at most one thread waiting on the same object to be notified (i.e., the object that calls notify must be the same as the object that called wait). A call to notifyAll causes all threads waiting on the same object to be notified. If more than one thread is waiting on that object, there is no way to control which of them is notified by a call to notify (so it is often better to use notifyAll than notify). Question: What is synchronized keyword? In what situations you will Use it? Answer: Synchronization is the act of serializing access to critical sections of code. We will use this keyword when we expect multiple threads to access/modify the same data. To understand synchronization we need to look into thread execution manner. Threads may execute in a manner where their paths of execution are completely independent of each other. Neither thread depends upon the other for assistance. For example, one thread might execute a print job, while a second thread repaints a window. And then there are threads that require synchronization, the act of serializing access to critical sections of code, at various moments during their executions. For example, say that two threads need to send data packets over a single network connection. Each thread must be able to send its entire data packet before the other thread starts sending its data packet; otherwise, the data is scrambled. This scenario requires each thread to synchronize its access to the code that does the actual data-packet sending. If you feel a method is very critical for business that needs to be executed by only one thread at a time (to prevent data loss or corruption), then we need to use synchronized keyword. EXAMPLE Some real-world tasks are better modeled by a program that uses threads than by a normal, sequential program. For example, consider a bank whose accounts can be accessed and updated by any of a number of automatic teller machines (ATMs). Each ATM could be a separate thread, responding to deposit and withdrawal requests from different users simultaneously. Of course, it would be important to make sure that two users did not access the same account simultaneously. This is done in Java using synchronization, which can be applied to individual methods, or to sequences of statements. One or more methods of a class can be declared to be synchronized. When a thread calls an object's synchronized method, the whole object is locked. This means that if another thread tries to call any synchronized method of the same object, the call will block until the lock is released (which happens when the original call finishes). In general, if the value of a field of an object can be changed, then all methods that read or write that field should be synchronized to prevent two threads from trying to write the field at the same time, and to prevent one thread from reading the field while another thread is in the process of writing it. Here is an example of a BankAccount class that uses synchronized methods to ensure that deposits and withdrawals cannot be performed simultaneously, and to ensure that the account balance cannot be read while either a deposit or a withdrawal is in progress. (To keep the example simple, no check is done to ensure that a withdrawal does not lead to a negative balance.) public class BankAccount { private double balance; // constructor: set balance to given amount public BankAccount( double initialDeposit ) { balance = initialDeposit; } public synchronized double Balance( ) { return balance; } public synchronized void Deposit( double deposit ) { balance += deposit; } public synchronized void Withdraw( double withdrawal ) { balance -= withdrawal; } } Note: that the BankAccount's constructor is not declared to be synchronized. That is because it can only be executed when the object is being created, and no other method can be called until that creation is finished. There are cases where we need to synchronize a group of statements, we can do that using synchrozed statement. Java Code Example synchronized ( B ) { if ( D > B.Balance() ) { ReportInsuffucientFunds(); } else { B.Withdraw( D ); } }
Question: What is serialization ?
Answer: Serialization is the process of writing complete state of java object into output stream, that stream can be file or byte array or stream associated with TCP/IP socket.
Question: What does the Serializable interface do ?
Answer: Serializable is a tagging interface; it prescribes no methods. It serves to assign the Serializable data type to the tagged class and to identify the class as one which the developer has designed for persistence. ObjectOutputStream serializes only those objects which implement this interface.
Question: How do I serialize an object to a file ?
Answer: To serialize an object into a stream perform the following actions:
- Open one of the output streams, for exaample FileOutputStream
- Chain it with the ObjectOutputStream - Call the method writeObject() providingg the instance of a Serializable object as an argument.
- Close the streams
Java Code --------- try{ fOut= new FileOutputStream("c:\\emp.ser"); out = new ObjectOutputStream(fOut); out.writeObject(employee); //serializing System.out.println("An employee is serialized into c:\\emp.ser"); } catch(IOException e){ e.printStackTrace(); }
Question: How do I deserilaize an Object?
Answer: To deserialize an object, perform the following steps:
- Open an input stream
- Chain it with the ObjectInputStream - Call the method readObject() and cast tthe returned object to the class that is being deserialized.
- Close the streams
Java Code try{ fIn= new FileInputStream("c:\\emp.ser"); in = new ObjectInputStream(fIn); //de-serializing employee Employee emp = (Employee) in.readObject(); System.out.println("Deserialized " + emp.fName + " " + emp.lName + " from emp.ser "); }catch(IOException e){ e.printStackTrace(); }catch(ClassNotFoundException e){ e.printStackTrace(); }
Question: What is Externalizable Interface ?
Answer : Externalizable interface is a subclass of Serializable. Java provides Externalizable interface that gives you more control over what is being serialized and it can produce smaller object footprint. ( You can serialize whatever field values you want to serialize)
This interface defines 2 methods: readExternal() and writeExternal() and you have to implement these methods in the class that will be serialized. In these methods you'll have to write code that reads/writes only the values of the attributes you are interested in. Programs that perform serialization and deserialization have to write and read these attributes in the same sequence.
Question: Explain garbage collection ?
Answer: Garbage collection is an important part of Java's security strategy. Garbage collection is also called automatic memory management as JVM automatically removes the unused variables/objects from the memory. The name "garbage collection" implies that objects that are no longer needed by the program are "garbage" and can be thrown away. A more accurate and up-to-date metaphor might be "memory recycling." When an object is no longer referenced by the program, the heap space it occupies must be recycled so that the space is available for subsequent new objects. The garbagecollector must somehow determine which objects are no longer referenced by the program and make available the heap space occupied by such unreferenced objects. In the process of freeing unreferenced objects, the garbage collector must run any finalizers of objects being freed
Question : How you can force the garbage collection ?
Answer : Garbage collection automatic process and can't be forced. We can call garbage collector in Java by calling System.gc() and Runtime.gc(), JVM tries to recycle the unused objects, but there is no guarantee when all the objects will garbage collected.
Question : What are the field/method access levels (specifiers) and class access levels ?
Answer: Each field and method has an access level:
• private: accessible only in this class
• (package): accessible only in this package
• protected: accessible only in this package and in all subclasses of this class
• public: accessible everywhere this class is available
Similarly, each class has one of two possible access levels:
• (package): class objects can only be declared and manipulated by code in this package
public: class objects can be declared and manipulated by code in any package
Question: What are the static fields & static Methods ?
Answer: If a field or method defined as a static, there is only one copy for entire class, rather than one copy for each instance of class. static method cannot accecss non-static field or call non-static method
Example Java Code
static int counter = 0;
A public static field or method can be accessed from outside the class using either the usual notation:
Java-class-object.field-or-method-name
or using the class name instead of the name of the class object:
Java- class-name.field-or-method-name
Question: What are the Final fields & Final Methods ?
Answer: Fields and methods can also be declared final. A final method cannot be overridden in a subclass. A final field is like a constant: once it has been given a value, it cannot be assigned to again.
Java Code
private static final int MAXATTEMPTS = 10;
Question: Describe the wrapper classes in Java ?
Answer: Wrapper class is wrapper around a primitive data type. An instance of a wrapper class contains, or wraps, a primitive value of the corresponding type.
Following table lists the primitive types and the corresponding wrapper classes:
Primitive Wrapper
boolean java.lang.Boolean
byte java.lang.Byte
char java.lang.Character
double java.lang.Double
float java.lang.Float
int java.lang.Integer
long java.lang.Long
short java.lang.Short
void java.lang.Void
Question: What are different types of inner classes ?
Answer: Inner classes nest within other classes. A normal class is a direct member of a package. Inner classes, which became available with Java 1.1, are four types
• Static member classes
• Member classes
• Local classes
• Anonymous classes
Static member classes - a static member class is a static member of a class. Like any other static method, a static member class has access to all static methods of the parent, or top-level, class.
Member Classes - a member class is also defined as a member of a class. Unlike the static variety, the member class is instance specific and has access to any and all methods and members, even the parent's this reference.
Local Classes - Local Classes declared within a block of code and these classes are visible only within the block.
Anonymous Classes - These type of classes does not have any name and its like a local class
Java Anonymous Class Example public class SomeGUI extends JFrame { ... button member declarations ... protected void buildGUI() { button1 = new JButton(); button2 = new JButton(); ... button1.addActionListener( new java.awt.event.ActionListener() <------ Anonymous Class { public void actionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent e) { // do something } } ); Question: What are the uses of Serialization? Answer: In some types of applications you have to write the code to serialize objects, but in many cases serialization is performed behind the scenes by various server-side containers. These are some of the typical uses of serialization: • To persist data for future use. • To send data to a remote computer using such client/server Java technologies as RMI or socket programming. • To "flatten" an object into array of bytes in memory. • To exchange data between applets and servlets. • To store user session in Web applications . • To activate/passivate enterprise java beans. • To send objects between the servers in a cluster. Question: what is a collection ? Answer: Collection is a group of objects. java.util package provides important types of collections. There are two fundamental types of collections they are Collection and Map. Collection types hold a group of objects, Eg. Lists and Sets where as Map types hold group of objects as key, value pairs Eg. HashMap and Hashtable. Question: For concatenation of strings, which method is good, StringBuffer or String ? Answer: StringBuffer is faster than String for concatenation. Question: What is Runnable interface ? Are there any other ways to make a java program as multithred java program? Answer: There are two ways to create new kinds of threads: - Define a new class that extends the Thread class - Define a new class that implements the Runnable interface, and pass an object of that class to a Thread's constructor. - An advantage of the second approach is that the new class can be a subclass of any class, not just of the Thread class. Here is a very simple example just to illustrate how to use the second approach to creating threads: class myThread implements Runnable { public void run() { System.out.println("I'm running!"); } } public class tstRunnable { public static void main(String[] args) { myThread my1 = new myThread(); myThread my2 = new myThread(); new Thread(my1).start(); new Thread(my2).start(); } Question: How can i tell what state a thread is in ? Answer: Prior to Java 5, isAlive() was commonly used to test a threads state. If isAlive() returned false the thread was either new or terminated but there was simply no way to differentiate between the two. Starting with the release of Tiger (Java 5) you can now get what state a thread is in by using the getState() method which returns an Enum of Thread.States. A thread can only be in one of the following states at a given point in time. NEW A Fresh thread that has not yet started to execute. RUNNABLE A thread that is executing in the Java virtual machine. BLOCKED A thread that is blocked waiting for a monitor lock. WAITING A thread that is wating to be notified by another thread. TIMED_WAITING A thread that is wating to be notified by another thread for a specific amount of time TERMINATED A thread whos run method has ended. The folowing code prints out all thread states. public class ThreadStates{ public static void main(String[] args){ Thread t = new Thread(); Thread.State e = t.getState(); Thread.State[] ts = e.values(); for(int i = 0; i < ts.length; i++){ System.out.println(ts[i]); } } } Question: What methods java providing for Thread communications ? Answer: Java provides three methods that threads can use to communicate with each other: wait, notify, and notifyAll. These methods are defined for all Objects (not just Threads). The idea is that a method called by a thread may need to wait for some condition to be satisfied by another thread; in that case, it can call the wait method, which causes its thread to wait until another thread calls notify or notifyAll. Question: What is the difference between notify and notify All methods ? Answer: A call to notify causes at most one thread waiting on the same object to be notified (i.e., the object that calls notify must be the same as the object that called wait). A call to notifyAll causes all threads waiting on the same object to be notified. If more than one thread is waiting on that object, there is no way to control which of them is notified by a call to notify (so it is often better to use notifyAll than notify). Question: What is synchronized keyword? In what situations you will Use it? Answer: Synchronization is the act of serializing access to critical sections of code. We will use this keyword when we expect multiple threads to access/modify the same data. To understand synchronization we need to look into thread execution manner. Threads may execute in a manner where their paths of execution are completely independent of each other. Neither thread depends upon the other for assistance. For example, one thread might execute a print job, while a second thread repaints a window. And then there are threads that require synchronization, the act of serializing access to critical sections of code, at various moments during their executions. For example, say that two threads need to send data packets over a single network connection. Each thread must be able to send its entire data packet before the other thread starts sending its data packet; otherwise, the data is scrambled. This scenario requires each thread to synchronize its access to the code that does the actual data-packet sending. If you feel a method is very critical for business that needs to be executed by only one thread at a time (to prevent data loss or corruption), then we need to use synchronized keyword. EXAMPLE Some real-world tasks are better modeled by a program that uses threads than by a normal, sequential program. For example, consider a bank whose accounts can be accessed and updated by any of a number of automatic teller machines (ATMs). Each ATM could be a separate thread, responding todeposit and withdrawal requests from different users simultaneously. Of course, it would be important to make sure that two users did not access the same account simultaneously. This is done in Java using synchronization, which can be applied to individual methods, or to sequences of statements. One or more methods of a class can be declared to be synchronized. When a thread calls an object's synchronized method, the whole object is locked. This means that if another thread tries to call any synchronized method of the same object, the call will block until the lock is released (which happens when the original call finishes). In general, if the value of a field of an object can be changed, then all methods that read or write that field should be synchronized to prevent two threads from trying to write the field at the same time, and to prevent one thread from reading the field while another thread is in the process of writing it. Here is an example of a BankAccount class that uses synchronized methods to ensure that deposits and withdrawals cannot be performed simultaneously, and to ensure that the account balance cannot be read while either a deposit or a withdrawal is in progress. (To keep the example simple, no check is done to ensure that a withdrawal does not lead to a negative balance.) public class BankAccount { private double balance; // constructor: set balance to given amount public BankAccount( double initialDeposit ) { balance = initialDeposit; } public synchronized double Balance( ) { return balance; } public synchronized void Deposit( double deposit ) { balance += deposit; } public synchronized void Withdraw( double withdrawal ) { balance -= withdrawal; } } Note: that the BankAccount's constructor is not declared to be synchronized. That is because it can only be executed when the object is being created, and no other method can be called until that creation is finished. There are cases where we need to synchronize a group of statements, we can do that using synchrozed statement. Java Code Example synchronized ( B ) { if ( D > B.Balance() ) { ReportInsuffucientFunds(); } else { B.Withdraw( D ); } }
Question: What is serialization ?
Answer: Serialization is the process of writing complete state of java object into output stream, that stream can be file or byte array or stream associated with TCP/IP socket.
Question: What does the Serializable interface do ?
Answer: Serializable is a tagging interface; it prescribes no methods. It serves to assign the Serializable data type to the tagged class and to identify the class as one which the developer has designed for persistence. ObjectOutputStream serializes only those objects which implement this interface.
Question: How do I serialize an object to a file ?
Answer: To serialize an object into a stream perform the following actions:
- Open one of the output streams, for exxample FileOutputStream
- Chain it with the ObjectOutputStream < - Call the method writeObject() providinng the instance of a Serializable object as an argument. - Close the streams Java Code --------- try{ fOut= new FileOutputStream("c:\\emp.ser"); out = new ObjectOutputStream(fOut); out.writeObject(employee); //serializing System.out.println("An employee is serialized into c:\\emp.ser"); } catch(IOException e){ e.printStackTrace(); } Question: How do I deserilaize an Object? Answer: To deserialize an object, perform the following steps: - Open an input stream - Chain it with the ObjectInputStream - Call the method readObject() and cast the returned object to the class that is being deserialized. - Close the streams Java Code try{ fIn= new FileInputStream("c:\\emp.ser"); in = new ObjectInputStream(fIn); //de-serializing employee Employee emp = (Employee) in.readObject(); System.out.println("Deserialized " + emp.fName + " " + emp.lName + " from emp.ser "); }catch(IOException e){ e.printStackTrace(); }catch(ClassNotFoundException e){ e.printStackTrace(); } Question: What is Externalizable Interface ? Answer: Externalizable interface is a subclass of Serializable. Java provides Externalizable interface that gives you more control over what is being serialized and it can produce smaller object footprint. ( You can serialize whatever field values you want to serialize) This interface defines 2 methods: readExternal() and writeExternal() and you have to implement these methods in the class that will be serialized. In these methods you'll have to write code that reads/writes only the values of the attributes you are interested in. Programs that perform serialization and deserialization have to write and read these attributes in the same sequence. Question: What is a transient variable? Answer: A transient variable is a variable that may not be serialized. Question: Which containers use a border Layout as their default layout? Answer: The window, Frame and Dialog classes use a border layout as their default layout. Question: Why do threads block on I/O? Answer: Threads block on i/o (that is enters the waiting state) so that other threads may execute while the i/o Operation is performed. Question: How are Observer and Observable used? Answer: Objects that subclass the Observable class maintain a list of observers. When an Observable object is updated it invokes the update() method of each of its observers to notify the observers that it has changed state. The Observer interface is implemented by objects that observe Observable objects. Question: What is synchronization and why is it important? Answer: With respect to multithreading, synchronization is the capability to control the access of multiple threads to shared resources. Without synchronization, it is possible for one thread to modify a shared object while another thread is in the process of using or updating that object's value. This often leads to significant errors. Question: Can a lock be acquired on a class? Answer: Yes, a lock can be acquired on a class. This lock is acquired on the class's Class object. Question: What's new with the stop(), suspend() and resume() methods in JDK 1.2? Answer: The stop(), suspend() and resume() methods have been deprecated in JDK 1.2. Question: Is null a keyword? Answer: The null value is not a keyword. Question: What is the preferred size of a component? Answer: The preferred size of a component is the minimum component size that will allow the component to display normally. Question: What method is used to specify a container's layout? Answer: The setLayout() method is used to specify a container's layout. Question: Which containers use a FlowLayout as their default layout? Answer: The Panel and Applet classes use the FlowLayout as their default layout. Question: What state does a thread enter when it terminates its processing? Answer: When a thread terminates its processing, it enters the dead state. Question: What is the Collections API? Answer: The Collections API is a set of classes and interfaces that support operations on collections of objects. Question: Which characters may be used as the second character of an identifier, but not as the first character of an identifier? Answer: The digits 0 through 9 may not be used as the first character of an identifier but they may be used after the first character of an identifier. Question: What is the List interface? Answer: The List interface provides support for ordered collections of objects. Question: How does Java handle integer overflows and underflows? Answer: It uses those low order bytes of the result that can fit into the size of the type allowed by the operation. Question: What is the Vector class? Answer: The Vector class provides the capability to implement a growable array of objects Question: What modifiers may be used with an inner class that is a member of an outer class? Answer: A (non-local) inner class may be declared as public, protected, private, static, final, or abstract. Question: What is an Iterator interface? Answer: The Iterator interface is used to step through the elements of a Collection. Question: What is the difference between the >> and >>> operators?
Answer: The >> operator carries the sign bit when shifting right. The >>> zero-fills bits that have been shifted out.
Question: Which method of the Component class is used to set the position and size of a component?
Answer: setBounds()
Question: How many bits are used to represent Unicode, ASCII, UTF-16, and UTF-8 characters?
Answer: Unicode requires 16 bits and ASCII require 7 bits. Although the ASCII character set uses only 7 bits, it is usually represented as 8 bits. UTF-8 represents characters using 8, 16, and 18 bit patterns. UTF-16 uses 16-bit and larger bit patterns.
Question: What is the difference between yielding and sleeping?
Answer: When a task invokes its yield() method, it returns to the ready state. When a task invokes its sleep() method, it returns to the waiting state.
Question: Which java.util classes and interfaces support event handling?
Answer: The EventObject class and the EventListener interface support event processing.
Question: Is sizeof a keyword?
Answer: The sizeof operator is not a keyword.
Question: What are wrapped classes?
Answer: Wrapped classes are classes that allow primitive types to be accessed as objects.
Question: Does garbage collection guarantee that a program will not run out of memory?
Answer: Garbage collection does not guarantee that a program will not run out of memory. It is possible for programs to use up memory resources faster than they are garbage collected. It is also possible for programs to create objects that are not subject to garbage collection
Question: What restrictions are placed on the location of a package statement within a source code file?
Answer: A package statement must appear as the first line in a source code file (excluding blank lines and comments).
Question: Can an object's finalize() method be invoked while it is reachable?
Answer: An object's finalize() method cannot be invoked by the garbage collector while the object is still reachable. However, an object's finalize() method may be invoked by other objects.
Question: What is the immediate superclass of the Applet class?
Answer: Panel
Question: What is the difference between preemptive scheduling and time slicing?
Answer: Under preemptive scheduling, the highest priority task executes until it enters the waiting or dead states or a higher priority task comes into existence. Under time slicing, a task executes for a predefined slice of time and then reenters the pool of ready tasks. The scheduler then determines which task should execute next, based on priority and other factors.
Question: Name three Component subclasses that support painting.
Answer: The Canvas, Frame, Panel, and Applet classes support painting.
Question: What value does readLine() return when it has reached the end of a file?
Answer: The readLine() method returns null when it has reached the end of a file.
Question: What is the immediate superclass of the Dialog class?
Answer: Window
Question: What is clipping?
Answer: Clipping is the process of confining paint operations to a limited area or shape.
Question: What is a native method?
Answer: A native method is a method that is implemented in a language other than Java.
Question: Can a for statement loop indefinitely?
Answer: Yes, a for statement can loop indefinitely. For example, consider the following: for(;;) ;
Question: What are order of precedence and associativity, and how are they used?
Answer: Order of precedence determines the order in which operators are evaluated in expressions. Associatity determines whether an expression is evaluated left-to-right or right-to-left
Question: When a thread blocks on I/O, what state does it enter?
Answer: A thread enters the waiting state when it blocks on I/O.
Question: To what value is a variable of the String type automatically initialized?
Answer: The default value of an String type is null.
Question: What is the catch or declare rule for method declarations?
Answer: If a checked exception may be thrown within the body of a method, the method must either catch the exception or declare it in its throws clause.
Question: What is the difference between a MenuItem and a CheckboxMenuItem?
Answer: The CheckboxMenuItem class extends the MenuItem class to support a menu item that may be checked or unchecked.
Question: What is a task's priority and how is it used in scheduling?
Answer: A task's priority is an integer value that identifies the relative order in which it should be executed with respect to other tasks. The scheduler attempts to schedule higher priority tasks before lower priority tasks.
Question: What class is the top of the AWT event hierarchy?
Answer: The java.awt.AWTEvent class is the highest-level class in the AWT event-class hierarchy.
Question: When a thread is created and started, what is its initial state?
Answer: A thread is in the ready state after it has been created and started.
Question: Can an anonymous class be declared as implementing an interface and extending a class?
Answer: An anonymous class may implement an interface or extend a superclass, but may not be declared to do both.
Question: What is the range of the short type?
Answer: The range of the short type is -(2^15) to 2^15 - 1.
Question: What is the range of the char type?
Answer: The range of the char type is 0 to 2^16 - 1.
Question: In which package are most of the AWT events that support the event-delegation model defined?
Answer: Most of the AWT-related events of the event-delegation model are defined in the java.awt.event package. The AWTEvent class is defined in the java.awt package.
Question: What is the immediate superclass of Menu?
Answer: MenuItem
Question: What is the purpose of finalization?
Answer: The purpose of finalization is to give an unreachable object the opportunity to perform any cleanup processing before the object is garbage collected.
Question: Which class is the immediate superclass of the MenuComponent class.
Answer: Object
Question: What invokes a thread's run() method?
Answer: After a thread is started, via its start() method or that of the Thread class, the JVM invokes the thread's run() method when the thread is initially executed.
Question: What is the difference between the Boolean & operator and the && operator?
Answer: If an expression involving the Boolean & operator is evaluated, both operands are evaluated. Then the & operator is applied to the operand. When an expression involving the && operator is evaluated, the first operand is evaluated. If the first operand returns a value of true then the second operand is evaluated. The && operator is then applied to the first and second operands. If the first operand evaluates to false, the evaluation of the second operand is skipped.
Question: Name three subclasses of the Component class.
Answer: Box.Filler, Button, Canvas, Checkbox, Choice, Container, Label, List, Scrollbar, or TextComponent
Question: What is the GregorianCalendar class?
Answer: The GregorianCalendar provides support for traditional Western calendars.
Question: Which Container method is used to cause a container to be laid out and redisplayed?
Answer: validate()
Question: What is the purpose of the Runtime class?
Answer: The purpose of the Runtime class is to provide access to the Java runtime system.
Question: How many times may an object's finalize() method be invoked by the garbage collector?
Answer: An object's finalize() method may only be invoked once by the garbage collector.
Question: What is the purpose of the finally clause of a try-catch-finally statement?
Answer: The finally clause is used to provide the capability to execute code no matter whether or not an exception is thrown or caught.
Question: What is the argument type of a program's main() method?
Answer: A program's main() method takes an argument of the String[] type.
Question: Which Java operator is right associative?
Answer: The = operator is right associative.
Question: What is the Locale class?
Answer: The Locale class is used to tailor program output to the conventions of a particular geographic, political, or cultural region.
Question: Can a double value be cast to a byte?
Answer: Yes, a double value can be cast to a byte.
Question: What is the difference between a break statement and a continue statement?
Answer: A break statement results in the termination of the statement to which it applies (switch, for, do, or while). A continue statement is used to end the current loop iteration and return control to the loop statement.
Question: What must a class do to implement an interface?
Answer: It must provide all of the methods in the interface and identify the interface in its implements clause.
Question: What method is invoked to cause an object to begin executing as a separate thread?
Answer: The start() method of the Thread class is invoked to cause an object to begin executing as a separate thread.
Question: Name two subclasses of the TextComponent class.
Answer: TextField and TextArea
Question: What is the advantage of the event-delegation model over the earlier event-inheritance model?
Answer: The event-delegation model has two advantages over the event-inheritance model. First, it enables event handling to be handled by objects other than the ones that generate the events (or their containers). This allows a clean separation
between a component's design and its use. The other advantage of the event-delegation model is that it performs much better in applications where many events are generated. This performance improvement is due to the fact that the event-delegation model does not have to repeatedly process unhandled events, as is the case of the event-inheritance model.
Question: Which containers may have a MenuBar?
Answer: Frame
Question: How are commas used in the intialization and iterationparts of a for statement?
Answer: Commas are used to separate multiple statements within the initialization and iteration parts of a for statement.
Question: What is the purpose of the wait(), notify(), and notifyAll() methods?
Answer: The wait(),notify(), and notifyAll() methods are used to provide an efficient way for threads to wait for a shared resource. When a thread executes an object's wait() method, it enters the waiting state. It only enters the ready state after another thread invokes the object's notify() or notifyAll() methods.
Question: What is an abstract method?
Answer: An abstract method is a method whose implementation is deferred to a subclass.
Question: How are Java source code files named?
Answer: A Java source code file takes the name of a public class or interface that is defined within the file. A source code file may contain at most one public class or interface. If a public class or interface is defined within a source code file, then the source code file must take the name of the public class or interface. If no public class or interface is defined
within a source code file, then the file must take on a name that is different than its classes and interfaces. Source code files use the .java extension.
Question: What is the relationship between the Canvas class and the Graphics class?
Answer: A Canvas object provides access to a Graphics object via its paint() method.
Question: What are the high-level thread states?
Answer: The high-level thread states are ready, running, waiting, and dead.
Question: What value does read() return when it has reached the end of a file?
Answer: The read() method returns -1 when it has reached the end of a file.
Question: Can a Byte object be cast to a double value?
Answer: No, an object cannot be cast to a primitive value.
Question: What is the difference between a static and a non-static inner class?
Answer: A non-static inner class may have object instances that are associated with instances of the class's outer class. A static inner class does not have any object instances.
Question: What is the difference between the String and StringBuffer classes?
Answer: String objects are constants. StringBuffer objects are not.
Question: If a variable is declared as private, where may the variable be accessed?
Answer: A private variable may only be accessed within the class in which it is declared.
Question: What is an object's lock and which object's have locks?
Answer: An object's lock is a mechanism that is used by multiple threads to obtain synchronized access to the object. A thread may execute a synchronized method of an object only after it has acquired the object's lock. All objects and classes have locks. A class's lock is acquired on the class's Class object.
Question: What is the Dictionary class?
Answer: The Dictionary class provides the capability to store key-value pairs.
Question: How are the elements of a BorderLayout organized?
Answer: The elements of a BorderLayout are organized at the borders (North, South, East, and West) and the center of a container.
Question: What is the % operator?
Answer: It is referred to as the modulo or remainder operator. It returns the remainder of dividing the first operand by the second operand.
Question: When can an object reference be cast to an interface reference?
Answer: An object reference be cast to an interface reference when the object implements the referenced interface.
Question: What is the difference between a Window and a Frame?
Answer: The Frame class extends Window to define a main application window that can have a menu bar.
Question: Which class is extended by all other classes?
Answer: The Object class is extended by all other classes.
Question: Can an object be garbage collected while it is still reachable?
Answer: A reachable object cannot be garbage collected. Only unreachable objects may be garbage collected..
Question: Is the ternary operator written x : y ? z or x ? y : z ?
Answer: It is written x ? y : z.
Question: What is the difference between the Font and FontMetrics classes?
Answer: The FontMetrics class is used to define implementation-specific properties, such as ascent and descent, of a Font object.
Question: How is rounding performed under integer division?
Answer: The fractional part of the result is truncated. This is known as rounding toward zero.
Question: What happens when a thread cannot acquire a lock on an object?
Answer: If a thread attempts to execute a synchronized method or synchronized statement and is unable to acquire an object's lock, it enters the waiting state until the lock becomes available.
Question: What is the difference between the Reader/Writer class hierarchy and the InputStream/OutputStream class hierarchy?
Answer: The Reader/Writer class hierarchy is character-oriented, and the InputStream/OutputStream class hierarchy is byte-oriented.
Question: What classes of exceptions may be caught by a catch clause?
Answer: A catch clause can catch any exception that may be assigned to the Throwable type. This includes the Error and Exception types.
Question: If a class is declared without any access modifiers, where may the class be accessed?
Answer: A class that is declared without any access modifiers is said to have package access. This means that the class can only be accessed by other classes and interfaces that are defined within the same package.
Question: What is the SimpleTimeZone class?
Answer: The SimpleTimeZone class provides support for a Gregorian calendar.
Question: What is the Map interface?
Answer: The Map interface replaces the JDK 1.1 Dictionary class and is used associate keys with values.
Question: Does a class inherit the constructors of its superclass?
Answer: A class does not inherit constructors from any of its superclasses.
Question: For which statements does it make sense to use a label?
Answer: The only statements for which it makes sense to use a label are those statements that can enclose a break or continue statement.
Question: What is the purpose of the System class?
Answer: The purpose of the System class is to provide access to system resources.
Question: Which TextComponent method is used to set a TextComponent to the read-only state?
Answer: setEditable()
Question: How are the elements of a CardLayout organized?
Answer: The elements of a CardLayout are stacked, one on top of the other, like a deck of cards.
Question: Is &&= a valid Java operator?
Answer: No, it is not.
Question: Name the eight primitive Java types.
Answer: The eight primitive types are byte, char, short, int, long, float, double, and boolean.
Question: Which class should you use to obtain design information about an object?
Answer: The Class class is used to obtain information about an object's design.
Question: What is the relationship between clipping and repainting?
Answer: When a window is repainted by the AWT painting thread, it sets the clipping regions to the area of the window that requires repainting.
Question: Is "abc" a primitive value?
Answer: The String literal "abc" is not a primitive value. It is a String object.
Question: What is the relationship between an event-listener interface and an event-adapter class?
Answer: An event-listener interface defines the methods that must be implemented by an event handler for a particular kind of event. An event adapter provides a default implementation of an event-listener interface.
Question: What restrictions are placed on the values of each case of a switch statement?
Answer: During compilation, the values of each case of a switch statement must evaluate to a value that can be promoted to an int value.
Question: What modifiers may be used with an interface declaration?
Answer: An interface may be declared as public or abstract.
Question: Is a class a subclass of itself?
Answer: A class is a subclass of itself.
Question: What is the highest-level event class of the event-delegation model?
Answer: The java.util.EventObject class is the highest-level class in the event-delegation class hierarchy.
Question: What event results from the clicking of a button?
Answer: The ActionEvent event is generated as the result of the clicking of a button.
Question: How can a GUI component handle its own events?
Answer: A component can handle its own events by implementing the required event-listener interface and adding itself as its own event listener.
Question: What is the difference between a while statement and a dostatement?
Answer: A while statement checks at the beginning of a loop to see whether the next loop iteration should occur. A do statement checks at the end of a loop to see whether the next iteration of a loop should occur. The do statement will always execute the body of a loop at least once.
Question: How are the elements of a GridBagLayout organized?
Answer: The elements of a GridBagLayout are organized according to a grid. However, the elements are of different sizes and may occupy more than one row or column of the grid. In addition, the rows and columns may have different sizes.
Question: What advantage do Java's layout managers provide over traditional windowing systems?
Answer: Java uses layout managers to lay out components in a consistent manner across all windowing platforms. Since Java's layout managers aren't tied to absolute sizing and positioning, they are able to accomodate platform-specific differences among windowing systems.
Question: What is the Collection interface?
Answer: The Collection interface provides support for the implementation of a mathematical bag - an unordered collection of objects that may contain duplicates.
Question: What modifiers can be used with a local inner class?
Answer: A local inner class may be final or abstract.
Question: What is the difference between static and non-static variables?
Answer: A static variable is associated with the class as a whole rather than with specific instances of a class. Non-static variables take on unique values with each object instance.
Question: What is the difference between the paint() and repaint() methods?
Answer: The paint() method supports painting via a Graphics object. The repaint() method is used to cause paint() to be invoked by the AWT painting thread.
Question: What is the purpose of the File class?
Answer: The File class is used to create objects that provide access to the files and directories of a local file system.
Question: Can an exception be rethrown?
Answer: Yes, an exception can be rethrown.
Question: Which Math method is used to calculate the absolute value of a number?
Answer: The abs() method is used to calculate absolute values.
Question: How does multithreading take place on a computer with a single CPU?
Answer: The operating system's task scheduler allocates execution time to multiple tasks. By quickly switching between executing tasks, it creates the impression that tasks execute sequentially.
Question: When does the compiler supply a default constructor for a class?
Answer: The compiler supplies a default constructor for a class if no other constructors are provided.
Question: When is the finally clause of a try-catch-finally statement executed?
Answer: The finally clause of the try-catch-finally statement is always executed unless the thread of execution terminates or an exception occurs within the execution of the finally clause.
Question: Which class is the immediate superclass of the Container class?
Answer: Component
Question: If a method is declared as protected, where may the method be accessed?
Answer: A protected method may only be accessed by classes or interfaces of the same package or by subclasses of the class in which it is declared.
Question: How can the Checkbox class be used to create a radio button?
Answer: By associating Checkbox objects with a CheckboxGroup.
Question: Which non-Unicode letter characters may be used as the first character of an identifier?
Answer: The non-Unicode letter characters $ and _ may appear as the first character of an identifier
Question: What restrictions are placed on method overloading?
Answer: Two methods may not have the same name and argument list but different return types.
Question: What happens when you invoke a thread's interrupt method while it is sleeping or waiting?
Answer: When a task's interrupt() method is executed, the task enters the ready state. The next time the task enters the running state, an InterruptedException is thrown.
Question: What is casting?
Answer: There are two types of casting, casting between primitive numeric types and casting between object references. Casting between numeric types is used to convert larger values, such as double values, to smaller values, such as byte values. Casting between object references is used to refer to an object by a compatible class, interface, or array type reference.
Question: What is the return type of a program's main() method?
Answer: A program's main() method has a void return type.
Question: Name four Container classes.
Answer: Window, Frame, Dialog, File Dialog, Panel, Applet, or ScrollPane
Question: What is the difference between a Choice and a List?
Answer: A Choice is displayed in a compact form that requires you to pull it down to see the list of available choices. Only one item may be selected from a Choice. A List may be displayed in such a way that several List items are visible. A List supports the selection of one or more List items.
Question: What class of exceptions are generated by the Java run-time system?
Answer: The Java runtime system generates Runtime Exception and Error exceptions.
Question: What class allows you to read objects directly from a stream?
Answer: The ObjectInputStream class supports the reading of objects from input streams.
Question: What is the difference between a field variable and a local variable?
Answer: A field variable is a variable that is declared as a member of a class. A local variable is a variable that is declared local to a method.
Question: Under what conditions is an object's finalize() method invoked by the garbage collector?
Answer: The garbage collector invokes an object's finalize() method when it detects that the object has become unreachable.
Question: How are this() and super() used with constructors?
Answer: this() is used to invoke a constructor of the same class. super() is used to invoke a superclass constructor.
Question: What is the relationship between a method's throws clause and the exceptions that can be thrown during the method's execution?
Answer: A method's throws clause must declare any checked exceptions that are not caught within the body of the method.
Question: What is the difference between the JDK 1.02 event model and the event-delegation model introduced with JDK 1.1?
Answer: The JDK 1.02 event model uses an event inheritance or bubbling approach. In this model, components are required to handle their own events. If they do not handle a particular event, the event is inherited by (or bubbled up to) the component's container. The container then either handles the event or it is bubbled up to its container and so on, until the highest-level container has been tried.
In the event-delegation model, specific objects are designated as event handlers for GUI components. These objects implement event-listener interfaces. The event-delegation model is more efficient than the event-inheritance model because it eliminates the processing required to support the bubbling of unhand led events.
Question: How is it possible for two String objects with identical values not to be equal under the == operator?
Answer: The == operator compares two objects to determine if they are the same object in memory. It is possible for two String objects to have the same value, but located indifferent areas of memory.
Question: Why are the methods of the Math class static?
Answer: So they can be invoked as if they are a mathematical code library.
Question: What Checkbox method allows you to tell if a Checkbox is checked?
Answer: getState()
Question: What state is a thread in when it is executing?
Answer: An executing thread is in the running state.
Question: What are the legal operands of the instance of operator?
Answer: The left operand is an object reference or null value and the right operand is a class, interface, or array type.
Question: How are the elements of a GridLayout organized?
Answer: The elements of a GridBad layout are of equal size and are laid out using the squares of a grid.
Question: What an I/O filter?
Answer: An I/O filter is an object that reads from one stream and writes to another, usually altering the data in some way as it is passed from one stream to another.
Question: If an object is garbage collected, can it become reachable again?
Answer: Once an object is garbage collected, it ceases to exist.It can no longer become reachable again.
Question: What is the Set interface?
Answer: The Set interface provides methods for accessing the elements of a finite mathematical set. Sets do not allow duplicate elements.
Question: What classes of exceptions may be thrown by a throw statement?
Answer: A throw statement may throw any expression that may be assigned to the Throwable type.
Question: What are E and PI?
Answer: E is the base of the natural logarithm and PI is mathematical value pi.
Question: Are true and false keywords?
Answer: The values true and false are not keywords.
Question: What is a void return type?
Answer: A void return type indicates that a method does not return a value.
Question: What is the purpose of the enableEvents() method?
Answer: The enableEvents() method is used to enable an event for a particular object. Normally, an event is enabled when a listener is added to an object for a particular event. The enableEvents() method is used by objects that handle events by overriding their event-dispatch methods.
Question: What is the difference between the File and RandomAccessFile classes?
Answer: The File class encapsulates the files and directories of the local file system. The RandomAccessFile class provides the methods needed to directly access data contained in any part of a file.
Question: What happens when you add a double value to a String?
Answer: The result is a String object.
Question: What is your platform's default character encoding?
Answer: If you are running Java on English Windows platforms, it is probably Cp1252. If you are running Java on English Solaris platforms, it is most likely 8859_1..
Question: Which package is always imported by default?
Answer: The java.lang package is always imported by default.
Question: What interface must an object implement before it can be written to a stream as an object?
Answer: An object must implement the Serializable or Externalizable interface before it can be written to a stream as an object.
Question: How are this and super used?
Answer: this is used to refer to the current object instance. super is used to refer to the variables and methods of the superclass of the current object instance.
Question: What is the purpose of garbage collection?
Answer: The purpose of garbage collection is to identify and discard objects that are no longer needed by a program so that their resources may be reclaimed and reused.
Question: What is a compilation unit?
Answer: A compilation unit is a Java source code file.
Question: What interface is extended by AWT event listeners?
Answer: All AWT event listeners extend the java.util.EventListener interface.
Question: What restrictions are placed on method overriding?
Answer: Overridden methods must have the same name, argument list, and return type. The overriding method may not limit the access of the method it overrides. The overriding method may not throw any exceptions that may not be thrown by the overridden method.
Question: How can a dead thread be restarted?
Answer: A dead thread cannot be restarted.
Question: What happens if an exception is not caught?
Answer: An uncaught exception results in the uncaughtException() method of the thread's ThreadGroup being invoked, which eventually results in the termination of the program in which it is thrown.
Question: What is a layout manager?
Answer: A layout manager is an object that is used to organize components in a container.
Question: Which arithmetic operations can result in the throwing of an ArithmeticException?
Answer: Integer / and % can result in the throwing of an ArithmeticException.
Question: What are three ways in which a thread can enter the waiting state?
Answer: A thread can enter the waiting state by invoking its sleep() method, by blocking on I/O, by unsuccessfully attempting to acquire an object's lock, or by invoking an object's wait() method. It can also enter the waiting state by invoking its (deprecated) suspend() method.
Question: Can an abstract class be final?
Answer: An abstract class may not be declared as final.
Question: What is the ResourceBundle class?
Answer: The ResourceBundle class is used to store locale-specific resources that can be loaded by a program to tailor the program's appearance to the particular locale in which it is being run.
Question: What happens if a try-catch-finally statement does not have a catch clause to handle an exception that is thrown within the body of the try statement?
Answer: The exception propagates up to the next higher level try-catch statement (if any) or results in the program's termination.
Question: What is numeric promotion?
Answer: Numeric promotion is the conversion of a smaller numeric type to a larger numeric type, so that integer and floating-point operations may take place. In numerical promotion, byte, char, and short values are converted to int values. The int values are also converted to long values, if necessary. The long and float values are converted to double values, as required.
Question: What is the difference between a Scrollbar and a ScrollPane?
Answer: A Scrollbar is a Component, but not a Container. A ScrollPane is a Container. A ScrollPane handles its own events and performs its own scrolling.
Question: What is the difference between a public and a non-public class?
Answer: A public class may be accessed outside of its package. A non-public class may not be accessed outside of its package.
Question: To what value is a variable of the boolean type automatically initialized?
The default value of the boolean type is false.
Question: Can try statements be nested?
Try statements may be tested.
Question: What is the difference between the prefix and postfix forms of the ++ operator?
The prefix form performs the increment operation and returns the value of the increment operation. The postfix form returns the current value all of the expression and then performs the increment operation on that value.
Question: What is the purpose of a statement block?
A statement block is used to organize a sequence of statements as a single statement group.
Question: What is a Java package and how is it used?
A Java package is a naming context for classes and interfaces. A package is used to create a separate name space for groups of classes and interfaces. Packages are also used to organize related classes and interfaces into a single API unit and to control accessibility to these classes and interfaces.
Question: What modifiers may be used with a top-level class?
A top-level class may be public, abstract, or final.
Question: What are the Object and Class classes used for?
The Object class is the highest-level class in the Java class hierarchy. The Class class is used to represent the classes and interfaces that are loaded by aJava program.
Question: How does a try statement determine which catch clause should be used to handle an exception?
When an exception is thrown within the body of a try statement, the catch clauses of the try statement are examined in the order in which they appear. The first catch clause that is capable of handling the exception is executed. The remaining catch clauses are ignored.
Question: Can an unreachable object become reachable again?
Answer: An unreachable object may become reachable again. This can happen when the object's finalize() method is invoked and the object performs an operation which causes it to become accessible to reachable objects.
Question: When is an object subject to garbage collection?
Answer: An object is subject to garbage collection when it becomes unreachable to the program in which it is used.
Question: What method must be implemented by all threads?
Answer: All tasks must implement the run() method, whether they are a subclass ofThread or implement the Runnable interface.
Question: What methods are used to get and set the text label displayed by a Button object?
Answer: getLabel() and setLabel()
Question: Which Component subclass is used for drawing and painting?
Answer: Canvas
Question: What are synchronized methods and synchronized statements?
Answer: Synchronized methods are methods that are used to control access to an object. A thread only executes a synchronized method after it has acquired the lock for the method's object or class. Synchronized statements are similar to synchronized methods. A synchronized statement can only be executed after a thread has acquired the lock for the object or class referenced in the synchronized statement.
Question: What are the two basic ways in which classes that can be run as threads may be defined?
Answer: A thread class may be declared as a subclass of Thread, or it may implement the Runnable interface.
Question: What are the problems faced by Java programmers who don't use layout managers?
Answer: Without layout managers, Java programmers are faced with determining how their GUI will be displayed across multiple windowing systems and finding a common sizingand positioning that will work within the constraints imposed by each windowing system.
Question: What is the difference between an if statement and a switch statement?
Answer: The if statement is used to select among two alternatives. It uses a boolean expression to decide which alternative should be executed. The switch statement is used to select among multiple alternatives. It uses an int expression to determine which alternative should be executed.
Question: What happens when you add a double value to a String?
Answer: The result is a String object.
Question: What is the List interface?
Answer: The List interface provides support for ordered collections of objects.
Question: Why do we need public static void main(String args[]) method in Java
Answer: We need
• public: The method can be accessed outside the class / package
• static: You need not have an instance of the class to access the method
• void: Your application need not return a value, as the JVM launcher would return the value when it exits
• main(): This is the entry point for the application
If the main() was not static, you would require an instance of the class in order to execute the method.
If this is the case, what would create the instance of the class? What if your class did not have a public constructor?
Question: What is the difference between an Interface and an Abstract class
Answer: In abstract class you can define as well as declare methods, the methods which are declared are to be marked as abstract.
In interface all we just declare methods and the definition is provided by the class which is implementing it
Question: Explain serialization
Answer: Serialization means storing a state of a java object by coverting it to byte stream
Question: What are the rules of serialization
Answer: Rules:
1. Static fileds are not serialized because they are not part of any one particular object
2. Fileds from the base class are handled only if hose are serializable
3. Transient fileds are not serialized
Question: What is difference between error and exception
Answer: Error occurs at runtime and cannot be recovered, Outofmemory is one such example. Exceptions on the other hand are due conditions which the application encounters such as FileNotFound exception or IO exceptions
Question: What do you mean by object oreiented programming
Answer: In object oreinted programming the emphasis is more on data than on the procedure and the program is divided into objects.
The data fields are hidden and they cant be accessed by external functions.
The design approach is bottom up.
The functions operate on data that is tied together in data structure
Question: What are 4 pillars of object oreinted programming
Answer:
1. Abstraction
It means hiding the details and only exposing the essentioal parts
2. Polymorphism
Polymorphism means having many forms. In java you can see polymorphism when you have multiple methods with the same name
3. Inheritance
Inheritance means the child class inherits the non private properties of the parent class
4. Encapsulation
It means data hiding. In java with encapsulate the data by making it private and even we want some other class to work on that data then the setter and getter methods are provided
Question: Difference between procedural and object oreinted language
Answer: In procedural programming the instructions are executed one after another and the data is exposed to the whole program
In OOPs programming the unit of program is an object which is nothing but combination of data and code and the data is not exposed outside the object
Question: What is the difference between constructor and method
Answer: Constructor will be automatically invoked when an object is created whereas method has to be called explicitly.
Question: What is the difference between parameters and arguments
Answer: While defining method, variables passed in the method are called parameters. While using those methods, values passed to those variables are called arguments.
Question: What is reflection in java
Answer: Reflection allows Java code to discover information about the fields, methods and constructors of loaded classes and to dynamically invoke them
Question: What is a cloneable interface and how many methods does it contain
Answer: It is not having any method because it is a TAGGED or MARKER interface
Question: What's the difference between a queue and a stack
Answer: Stacks works by last-in-first-out rule (LIFO), while queues use the FIFO rule
Question: Can you make an instance of abstract class
Answer: No you cannot create an instance of abstract class
Question: What are parsers
Answer: Parsers are used for processing XML documents. There are 2 types of parsers DOM parser and SAX Parser
Question: Difference between SAX and DOM parser
Answer: DOM parsers are Object based and SAX parsers are event based
DOM parsers creates Tree in the memory whereas SAX parser does not and hence it is faster than DOM
DOM parser are useful when we have to modify the XML, with SAX parser you cannot modify the xml, it is read only
Question: What is the difference between Java Bean and Java Class
Answer: Basically a Bean is a java class but it has getter and setter method and it does not have any logic in it, it is used for holding data.
On the other hand the Java class can have what a java bean has and also has some logic inside it
Question: What are null or Marker interfaces in Java
Answer: The null interfaces are marker interfaces, they do not have function declarations in them, they are empty interfaces, this is to convey the compiler that they have to be treated differently
Question: Does java Support multiple inheritance
Answer: Java does not support multiple inheritance directly like C++, because then it is prone to ambiguity, example if a class extends 2 other classes and these 2 parent classes have same method names then there is ambiguity. Hence in Java Multiple inheritance is supported using Interfaces
Question: What are virtual function
Answer: In OOP when a derived class inherits from a base class, an object of the derived class may be referred to (or cast) as either being the base class type or the derived class type. If there are base class functions overridden by the derived class, a problem then arises when a derived object has been cast as the base class type. When a derived object is referred to as being of the base's type, the desired function call behavior is ambiguous.
The distinction between virtual and not virtual is provided to solve this issue. If the function in question is designated "virtual" then the derived class's function would be called (if it exists). If it is not virtual, the base class's function would be called.
Question: Does java support virtual functions
Answer: No java does not support virtual functions direclty like in C++, but it supports using Abstract class and interfaces
Question: Describe what happens when an object is created in Java
Answer: Several things happen in a particular order to ensure the object is constructed properly:
1. Memory is allocated from heap to hold all instance variables and implementation-specific data of the
object and its superclasses. Implemenation-specific data includes pointers to class and method data.
2. The instance variables of the objects are initialized to their default values.
3. The constructor for the most derived class is invoked. The first thing a constructor does is call the
consctructor for its superclasses. This process continues until the constrcutor for java.lang.Object is called,
as java.lang.Object is the base class for all objects in java.
4. Before the body of the constructor is executed, all instance variable initializers and initialization blocks
are executed. Then the body of the constructor is executed. Thus, the constructor for the base class
completes first and constructor for the most derived class completes last.
Question: What is the purpose of System Class
Answer: The purpose of the system class is to provide the access to the System reources
Question: What is instanceOf operator used for
Answer: It is used to if an object can be cast into a specific type without throwing Class cast exception
Question: Why we should not have instance variable in an interface
Answer: Since all data fields and methods in an Interface are public by default, then we implement that interface in our class then we have public members in our class and this class will expose these data members and this is violation of encapsulation as now the data is not secure
Question: What is JVM
Answer: When we install a java package. It contains 2 things
* The Java Runtime Environment (JRE)
* The Java Development Kit (JDK)
The JRE provides runtime support for Java applications. The JDK provides the Java compiler and other development tools. The JDK includes the JRE.
Both the JRE and the JDK include a Java Virtual Machine (JVM). This is the application that executes a Java program. A Java program requires a JVM to run on a particular platform
Question: Can abstract class be final
Answer: No, abstract class cannot be final
Question: When a new object of derived Class is created, whose constructor will be called first, childs or parents
Answer: Even when the new object of child class is created, first the Base class constructor gets executed and then the child classes constructor
Question: What is a singleton class
Answer: A singleton is an object that cannot be instantiated. The restriction on the singleton is that there can be only one instance of a singleton created by the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) - by prevent direct instantiation we can ensure that developers don't create a second copy.
Question: Can an abstract class have final method
Answer: Yes
Question: Can a final class have an abstract method
Answer: No, the compiler will give an error
Question: What is the difference between Authentication and Authorization
Answer: Authentication is a process for verifying that an individual is who they say they are. Authorization is an additional level of security, and it means that a particular user (usually authenticated), may have access to a particular resource say record, file, directory or script.
Language Fundamentals
Question: How many number of non-public class definitions can a source file have A source file can contain unlimited number of non-public class definitions List primitive data types, there size and there range (min, max)
Answer:
Data Type Bytes bits min max
boolean - 1 - -
char 2 16 0 2^16-1
byte 1 8 -2^7 2^7-1
short 2 16 -2^15 2^15-1
int 4 32 -2^31 2^31-1
long 8 64 -2^63 2^63-1
float 4 32 - -
double 8 64 - -
Question: What types of values does boolean variables take It only takes values true and false. Which primitive datatypes are signed.
Answer: All except char and Boolean
Question: Is char type signed or unsigned
Answer: char type is integral but unsigned. It range is 0 to 2^7-1
Question: What forms an integral literal can be
Answer: decimal, octal and hexadecimal, hence example it can be 28, 034 and 0x1c respectively
Question: What is the default value of Boolean
Answer: False
Question: Why is the main method static
Answer: So that it can be invoked without creating an instance of that class
Question: What is the difference between class variable, member variable and automatic(local) variable
Answer: class variable is a static variable and does not belong to instance of class but rather shared across all the instances
member variable belongs to a particular instance of class and can be called from any method of the class
automatic or local variable is created on entry to a method and has only method scope
Question: When are static and non static variables of the class initialized
Answer: The static variables are initialized when the class is loadedNon static variables are initialized just before the constructor is called
Question: When are automatic variable initialized
Answer: Automatic variable have to be initialized explicitly
Question: How is an argument passed in java, by copy or by reference
Answer: If the variable is primitive datatype then it is passed by copy.
If the variable is an object then it is passed by reference
Question: What is garbage collection
Answer: The runtime system keeps track of the memory that is allocated and is able to determine whether that memory is still useable. This work is usually done in background by a low-priority thread that is referred to as garbage collector. When the gc finds memory that is no longer accessible from any live thread it takes steps to release it back to the heap for reuse
Question: Does System.gc and Runtime.gc() guarantee garbage collection
Answer: No
Operators and assignment
Question: What are different types of operators in java
Answer: Uniary ++, --, +, -, |, ~, ()
Arithmetic *, /, %,+, -
Shift <<, >>, >>>
Comparison =, instanceof, = =,!=Bitwise &, ^, |Short Circuit &&, ||Ternary ?:Assignment =
Question: How does bitwise (~) operator work
Answer: It converts all the 1 bits in a binary value to 0s and all the 0 bits to 1s, e.g 11110000 coverts to 00001111
Question: What is a modulo operator %
Answer: This operator gives the value which is related to the remainder of a divisione.g x=7%4 gives remainder 3 as an answer
Question: Can shift operators be applied to float types.
Answer: No, shift operators can be applied only to integer or long types
Question: What happens to the bits that fall off after shifting
Answer: They are discarded
Question: What values of the bits are shifted in after the shift
Answer: In case of signed left shift >> the new bits are set to zero But in case of signed right shift it takes the value of most significant bit before the shift, that is if the most significant bit before shift is 0 it will introduce 0, else if it is 1, it will introduce 1
Modifiers
Question: What are access modifiers
Answer: These public, protected and private, these can be applied to class, variables, constructors and methods. But if you don't specify an access modifier then it is considered as Friendly
Question: Can protected or friendly features be accessed from different packages
Answer: No when features are friendly or protected they can be accessed from all the classes in that package but not from classes in another package
Question: How can you access protected features from another package
Answer: You can access protected features from other classes by subclassing the that class in another package, but this cannot be done for friendly features
Question: What are the rules for overriding
Answer:
Private method can be overridden by private, friendly, protected or public methods
Friendly method can be overridden by friendly, protected or public methods
Protected method can be overridden by protected or public methods
Public method can be overridden by public method
Question: Explain modifier final
Answer: Final can be applied to classes, methods and variables and the features cannot be changed. Final class cannot be subclassed, methods cannot be overridden
Question: Can you change the reference of the final object
Answer: No the reference cannot be change, but the data in that object can be changed
Question: Can abstract modifier be applied to a variable
Answer: No it is applied only to class and methods
Question: Can abstract class be instantiated
Answer: No abstract class cannot be instantiated i.e you cannot create a new object of this class
Question: When does the compiler insist that the class must be abstract
Answer:
If one or more methods of the class are abstract.
If class inherits one or more abstract methods from the parent abstract class and no implementation is provided for that method
If class implements an interface and provides no implementation for those methods
Question: How is abstract class different from final class
Answer: Abstract class must be subclassed and final class cannot be subclassed
Question: Where can static modifiers be used
Answer: They can be applied to variables, methods and even a block of code, static methods and variables are not associated with any instance of class
Question: When are the static variables loaded into the memory
Answer: During the class load time
Question: When are the non static variables loaded into the memory
Answer: They are loaded just before the constructor is called
Question: How can you reference static variables
Answer: Via reference to any instance of the class
Computer comp = new Computer ();
comp.harddisk where hardisk is a static variable
comp.compute() where compute is a method
Via the class name
Computer.harddisk
Computer.compute()
Question: Can static method use non static features of there class
Answer: No they are not allowed to use non static features of the class, they can only call static methods and can use static data
Question: What is static initializer code
Answer: A class can have a block of initializer code that is simply surrounded by curly braces and labeled as static e.g.
public class Demo{
static int =10;
static{
System.out.println(“Hello world');
}
}
And this code is executed exactly once at the time of class load
Where is native modifier used It can refer only to methods and it indicates that the body of the method is to be found else where and it is usually written in non java language
Question: What are transient variables
Answer: A transient variable is not stored as part of objects persistent state and they cannot be final or static
Question: What is synchronized modifier used for
Answer: It is used to control access of critical code in multithreaded programs
Question: What are volatile variables
Answer: It indicates that these variables can be modified asynchronously
Conversion Casting and Promotion
Question: What are wrapped classes
Answer: Wrapped classes are classes that allow primitive types to be accessed as objects.
Question: What are the four general cases for Conversion and Casting
Answer:
Conversion of primitives
Casting of primitives
Conversion of object references
Casting of object references
Question: When can conversion happen
Answer:
It can happen during
Assignment
Method call
Arithmetic promotion
Question: What are the rules for primitive assignment and method call conversion
Answer:
A boolean can not be converted to any other type
A non Boolean can be converted to another non boolean type, if the conversion is widening conversion
A non Boolean cannot be converted to another non boolean type, if the conversion is narrowing conversion
See figure below for simplicity
Question: What are the rules for primitive arithmetic promotion conversion
Answer:
For Unary operators :
If operant is byte, short or a char it is converted to an int
If it is any other type it is not converted
For binary operands :
If one of the operands is double, the other operand is converted to double
Else If one of the operands is float, the other operand is converted to float
Else If one of the operands is long, the other operand is converted to long
Else both the operands are converted to int
Question: What are the rules for casting primitive types
Answer:
You can cast any non Boolean type to any other non boolean type
You cannot cast a boolean to any other type; you cannot cast any other type to a boolean
Question: What are the rules for object reference assignment and method call conversion
Answer: An interface type can only be converted to an interface type or to object. If the new type is an interface, it must be a superinterface of the old type. A class type can be converted to a class type or to an interface type. If converting to a class type the new type should be superclass of the old type. If converting to an interface type new type the old class must implement the interface. An array maybe converted to class object, to the interface cloneable, or to an array. Only an array of object references types may be converted to an array, and the old element type must be convertible to the new element.
Question: What are the rules for Object reference casting
Answer: Casting from Old types to Newtypes
Compile time rules
• When both Oldtypes and Newtypes are classes, one should be subclass of the other
• When both Oldtype ad Newtype are arrays, both arrays must contain reference types (not primitive), and it must be legal to cast an element of Oldtype to an element of Newtype
• You can always cast between an interface and a non-final object
Runtime rules
• If Newtype is a class. The class of the expression being converted must be Newtype or must inherit from Newtype
• If NewType is an interface, the class of the expression being converted must implement Newtype
Flow Control and exception
Question: What is the difference between while and do while loop
Answer: Do while loop walways executes the body of the loop at least once, since the test is performed at the end of the body
Question: When do you use continue and when do you use break statements
Answer: When continue statement is applied it prematurely completes the iteration of a loop.
When break statement is applied it causes the entire loop to be abandoned.
Question: What is the base class from which all exceptions are subclasses
Answer: All exceptions are subclasses of a class called java.lang.Throwable
Question: How do you intercept and thereby control exceptions
Answer: We can do this by using try/catch/finally blocks
You place the normal processing code in try block
You put the code to deal with exceptions that might arise in try block in catch block
Code that must be executed no matter what happens must be place in finally block
Question: When do we say an exception is handled
Answer: When an exception is thrown in a try block and is caught by a matching catch block, the exception is considered to have been handled
Question: When do we say an exception is not handled
Answer: There is no catch block that names either the class of exception that has been thrown or a class of exception that is a parent class of the one that has been thrown, then the exception is considered to be unhandled, in such condition the execution leaves the method directly as if no try has been executed
Question: In what sequence does the finally block gets executed
Answer: If you put finally after a try block without a matching catch block then it will be executed after the try block
If it is placed after the catch block and there is no exception then also it will be executed after the try block
If there is an exception and it is handled by the catch block then it will be executed after the catch block
Question: What can prevent the execution of the code in finally block
Answer:
• The death of thread
• Use of system.exit()
• Turning off the power to CPU
• An exception arising in the finally block itself
What are the rules for catching multiple exceptions
A more specific catch block must precede a more general one in the source, else it gives compilation error
Only one catch block, that is first applicable one, will be executed
Question: What does throws statement declaration in a method indicate
Answer: This indicates that the method throws some exception and the caller method should take care of handling it
Question: What are checked exception
Answer: Checked exceptions are exceptions that arise in a correct program, typically due to user mistakes like entering wrong data or I/O problems
Question: What are runtime exceptions
Answer: Runtime exceptions are due to programming bugs like out of bond arrays or null pointer exceptions.
Question: What is difference between Exception and errors
Answer: Errors are usually compile time and exceptions can be runtime or checked
Question: How will you handle the checked exceptions
Answer: You can provide a try/catch block to handle it. OR Make sure method declaration includes a throws clause that informs the calling method an exception might be thrown from this particular method. When you extend a class and override a method, can this new method throw exceptions other than those that were declared by the original method. No it cannot throw, except for the subclasses of those exceptions.
Question: Is it legal for the extending class which overrides a method which throws an exception, not o throw in the overridden class
Answer: Yes it is perfectly legal
Question: Explain the user defined Exceptions?
Answer: User defined Exceptions are the separate Exception classes defined by the user for specific purposed. An user defined can created by simply sub-classing it to the Exception class. This allows custom exceptions to be generated (using throw) and caught in the same way as normal exceptions.
Example:
class myCustomException extends Exception {
// The class simply has to exist to be an exception
}
Objects and Classes
Question: What's the difference between constructors and other methods
Answer: Constructors must have the same name as the class and can not return a value. They are only called once while regular methods could be called many times.
Question: What is the difference between Overloading and Overriding
Answer: Overloading : Reusing the same method name with different arguments and perhaps a different return type is called as overloading
Overriding : Using the same method name with identical arguments and return type is know as overriding
Question: What do you understand by late binding or virtual method Invocation. (Example of runtime polymorphism)
Answer: When a compiler for a non object oriented language comes across a method invocation, it determines exactly what target code should be called and build machine language to represent that call. In an object oriented language, this is not possible since the proper code to invoke is determined based upon the class if the object being used to make the call, not the type of the variable. Instead code is generated that will allow the decision to be made at run time. This delayed decision making is called as late binding
Question: Can overriding methods have different return types
Answer: No they cannot have different return types
Question: If the method to be overridden has access type protected, can subclass have the access type as private
Answer: No, it must have access type as protected or public, since an overriding method must not be less accessible than the method it overrides
Question: Can constructors be overloaded
Answer: Yes constructors can be overloaded
Question: What happens when a constructor of the subclass is called
Answer: A constructor delays running its body until the parent parts of the class have been initialized. This commonly happens because of an implicit call to super() added by the compiler. You can provide your own call to super(arguments..) to control the way the parent parts are initialized. If you do this, it must be the first statement of the constructor.
Question: If you use super() or this() in a constructor where should it appear in the constructor
Answer: It should always be the first statement in the constructor
Question: What is an inner class
Answer: An inner class is same as any other class, but is declared inside some other class
Question: How will you reference the inner class
Answer: To reference it you will have to use OuterClass$InnerClass
Question: Can objects that are instances of inner class access the members of the outer class
Answer: Yes they can access the members of the outer class
Question: What modifiers may be used with an inner class that is a member of an outer class?
Answer: A (non-local) inner class may be declared as public, protected, private, static, final, or abstract
Question: Can inner classes be static
Answer: Yes inner classes can be static, but they cannot access the non static data of the outer classes, though they can access the static data
Question: Can an inner class be defined inside a method
Answer: Yes it can be defined inside a method and it can access data of the enclosing methods or a formal parameter if it is final
Question: What is an anonymous class
Answer: Some classes defined inside a method do not need a name, such classes are called anonymous classes
Question: What are the rules of anonymous class
Answer: The class is instantiated and declared in the same place The declaration and instantiation takes the form new Xxxx () {// body}
Where Xxxx is an interface name. An anonymous class cannot have a constructor. Since you do not specify a name for the class, you cannot use that name to specify a constructor
Threads
Question: Where does java thread support reside
Answer: It resides in three places
The java.lang.Thread class (Most of the support resides here)
The java.lang.Object class
The java language and virtual machine
Question: What is the difference between Thread and a Process
Answer: Threads run inside process and they share data.
One process can have multiple threads, if the process is killed all the threads inside it are killed, they dont share data
Question: What happens when you call the start() method of the thread
Answer: This registers the thread with a piece of system code called thread scheduler. The schedulers determine which thread is actually running
Question: Does calling start () method of the thread causes it to run
Answer: No it merely makes it eligible to run. The thread still has to wait for the CPU time along with the other threads, then at some time in future, the scheduler will permit the thread to run
Question: When the thread gets to execute, what does it execute
Answer: The thread executes a method call run(). It can execute run() method of either of the two choices given below :
The thread can execute it own run() method.
The thread can execute the run() method of some other objects
For the first case you need to subclass the Thread class and give your subclass a run() method
For the second method you need to have a class implement the interface runnable. Define your run method. Pass this object as an argument to the Thread constructor
Question: How many methods are declared in the interface runnable
Answer: The runnable method declares only one method :
public void run();
Question: Which way would you prefer to implement threading , by extending Thread class or implementing Runnable interface
Answer: The preferred way will be to use Interface Runnable, because by subclassing the Thread class you have single inheritance i.e you wont be able to extend any other class
Question: What happens when the run() method returns
Answer: When the run() method returns, the thread has finished its task and is considered dead. You can't restart a dead thread. You can call the methods of dead thread
Question: What are the different states of the thread
Answer: They are as follows:
Running: The state that all thread aspire to be
Various waiting states : Waiting, Sleeping, Suspended and Bloacked
Ready : Waiting only for the CPU
Dead : All done
Question: What is Thread priority
Answer: Every thread has a priority, the higher priorit thread gets preference over the lower priority thread by the thread scheduler
Question: What is the range of priority integer
Answer: It is from 1 to 10. 10 beings the highest priority and 1 being the lowest
Question: What is the default priority of the thread
Answer: The default priority is 5
Question: What happens when you call Thread.yield()
Answer: It caused the currently executing thread to move to the ready state if the scheduler is willing to run any other thread in place of the yielding thread. Yield is a static method of class Thread
Question: What is the advantage of yielding
Answer: It allows a time consuming thread to permit other threads to execute
Question: What happens when you call Thread.sleep()
Answer: It passes time without doing anything and without using the CPU. A call to sleep method requests the currently executing thread to cease executing for a specified amount of time.
Question: Does the thread method start executing as soon as the sleep time is over
Answer: No, after the specified time is over the thread enters into ready state and will only execute when the scheduler allows it to do so.
Question: What do you mean by thread blocking
Answer: If a method needs to wait an indeterminable amount of time until some I/O occurrence takes place, then a thread executing that method should graciously step out of the Running state. All java I/O methods behave this way. A thread that has graciously stepped out in this way is said to be blocked.
Question: What threading related methods are there in object class
Answer: wait(), notify() and notifyAll() are all part of Object class and they have to be called from synchronized code only
Question: What is preemptive scheduling
Answer: In preemptive scheduling there are only two ways for the thread to leave the running state without ecplicitly calling wait() or suspended() It can cease t be ready to execute ()by calling a blocking I/O method). It can get moved out by CPU by a higher priorit thread that becomes ready to execute
Question: What is non-preemptive or Time sliced or round robin scheduling
Answer: With time slicing the thread is allowd to execute for a limited amount of time. It is then moved to ready state, where it must contend with all the other ready threads.
Question: What are the two ways of synchronizing the code
Answer: Synchronizing an entire method by putting the synchronized modifier in the methods declaration. To execute the method, a thread must acquire the lock of the object that owns the method.
Synchronize a subset of a method by surrounding the desired lines of code with curly brackets and inserting the synchronized expression before the opening curly. This allows you to synchronize the block on the lock of any object at all, not necessarily the object that owns the code
Question: What happens when the wait() method is called
Answer: The calling thread gives up CPU
The calling thread gives up the lock
The calling thread goes into the monitor's waiting pool
Question: What happens when the notify() method is called
Answer: One thread gets moved out of monitors waiting pool and into the ready state
The thread that was notified ust reacquire the monitors locl before it can proceed
Question: Using notify () method how you can specify which thread should be notified
Answer: You cannot specify which thread is to be notified, hence it is always better to call notifyAll() method
java.lang & java.util Packages
Question: What is the ultimate ancestor of all java classes
Answer: Object class is the ancestor of all the java classes
Question: What are important methods of Object class
Answer: wait(), notify(), notifyAll(), equals(), toString().
Question: What is the difference between “= =” and “equals()”
Answer: “= =” does shallow comparison, It retuns true if the two object points to the same address in the memory, i.e if the same the same reference
“equals()” does deep comparison, it checks if the values of the data in the object are same
Question: What would you use to compare two String variables - the operator == or the method equals()?
Answer: I'd use the method equals() to compare the values of the Strings and the == to check if two variables point at the same instance of a String object
Question: Give example of a final class
Answer: Math class is final class and hence cannot be extended
Question: What is the difference between String and StringBuffer
Answer: String is an immutable class, i.e you cannot change the values of that class
Example:
String str = “java”; // address in memory say 12345
And now if you assign a new value to the variable str then
str = “core java”; then the value of the variable at address 12345 will not change but a new memory is allocated for this variable say 54321
So in the memory address 12345 will have value “java”
And the memory address 54321 will have value “core java” and the variable str will now be pointing to address 54321 in memory
StringBuffer can be modified dynamically
Example:
StringBuffer strt =”java” // address in memory is say 12345
And now if you assign a new value to the variable str then
Str = “core java”; then value in the address of memory will get replaced, a new memory address is not allocated in this case.
Question: What will be the result if you compare StringBuffer with String if both have same values
Answer: It will return false as you cannot compare String with StringBuffer
Question: What is Collection API
Answer: The Collection API is a set of classes and interfaces that support operation on collections of objects. These classes and interfaces are more flexible, more powerful, and more regular than the vectors, arrays, and hashtables if effectively replaces.
Example of classes: HashSet, HashMap, ArrayList, LinkedList, TreeSet and TreeMap.
Example of interfaces: Collection, Set, List and Map.
Question: What are different types of collections
Answer: A collection has no special order and does not reject duplicates
A list is ordered and does not reject duplicates
A set has no special order but rejects duplicates
A map supports searching on a key field, values of which must be unique
Question: Tell me something about Arrays
Answer: Arrays are fast to access, but are inefficient if the number of elements grow and if you have to insert or delete an element
Question: Difference between ArrayList and Vector
Answer: Vector methods are synchronized while ArrayList methods are not
Question: Iterator a Class or Interface? What is its use?
Answer: Iterator is an interface which is used to step through the elements of a Collection
Question: Difference between Hashtable and HashMap
Answer: Hashtable does not store null value, while HashMap does
Hashtable is synchronized, while HashMap is not
How to Throw Exceptions in Java
Before catching an exception it is must to be thrown first. This means that there should be a code somewhere in the program that could catch the exception. We use throw statement to throw an exception or simply use the throw keyword with an object reference to throw an exception. A single argument is required by the throw statement i.e. a throwable object. As mentioned earlier Throwable objects are instances of any subclass of the Throwable class.
throw new VeryFastException();
Note: The reference should be of type Throwable or one of its subclasses.
For instance the example below shows how to throw an exception. Here we are trying to divide a number by zero so we have thrown an exception here as "throw new MyException("can't be divided by zero");"
class MyException extends Exception {
public MyException(String msg){
super(msg);
}
}
public class Test {
static int divide(int first,int second) throws MyException{
if(second==0)
throw new MyException("can't be divided by zero");
return first/second;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
System.out.println(divide(4,0));
}
catch (MyException exc) {
exc.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Q: What is final?
Q: What is static in java?
Q: What is an abstract class?
Q: 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.
Q: What is an Iterator?
Q: What is the difference between a constructor and a method?
Q: Difference between Swing and Awt?
Q: Difference between Vector and ArrayList?
Q: Difference between HashMap and HashTable?
Q: What is HashMap and Map?
Q: What are pass by reference and passby value?
Q: Explain different way of using thread?
Q: Describe synchronization in respect to multithreading.
Q: What is the purpose of garbage collection in Java, and when is it used?