.equals vs == on strings code example
Example 1: java string equal vs ==
Case1)
String s1 = "Stack Overflow";
String s2 = "Stack Overflow";
s1 == s1;
s1.equals(s2);
Reason: String literals created without null are stored in the string pool in the permgen area of the heap. So both s1 and s2 point to the same object in the pool.
Case2)
String s1 = new String("Stack Overflow");
String s2 = new String("Stack Overflow");
s1 == s2;
s1.equals(s2);
Reason: If you create a String object using the `new` keyword a separate space is allocated to it on the heap.
Example 2: java == vs equals
In general both equals() and == operator in Java are used to compare
objects to check equality but here are some of the differences between the two:
1) .equals() and == is that one is a method and other is operator.
2) We can use == operator for reference comparison (address comparison)
and .equals() method for content comparison.
-> == checks if both objects point to the same memory location
-> .equals() evaluates to the comparison of values in the objects.
3) If a class does not override the equals method, then by default it
uses equals(Object o) method of the closest parent class
that has overridden this method.
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args)
{
String s1 = new String("HELLO");
String s2 = new String("HELLO");
System.out.println(s1 == s2);
System.out.println(s1.equals(s2));
}
}
Output:
false
true
Explanation: Here we are creating two (String) objects namely s1 and s2.
Both s1 and s2 refers to different objects.
-> When we use == operator for s1 and s2 comparison then the result is false
as both have different addresses in memory.
-> Using equals, the result is true because its only comparing the
values given in s1 and s2.