Monday, October 11, 2010

Java Print Streams

Java Print Streams


The first two output streams that Java programmers encounter are usually instances of the java.io.Printstream class. If you want to learn more about print streams, keep reading; this is the first part of a three-part series on the topic. It is excerpted from chapter seven of Java I/O, Second Edition, written by Elliotte Rusty Harold (O'Reilly, 2006; ISBN: 0596527500). Copyright © 2006 O'Reilly Media, Inc. All rights reserved. Used with permission from the publisher. Available from booksellers or direct from O'Reilly Media.

System.out is the first output stream most Java programmers encounter. System.err is probably the second. Both are instances of thejava.io.PrintStreamclass.PrintStreamis a subclass ofFilterOutputStreamthat converts numbers and objects to text.System.outis primarily used for simple, character-mode applications and for debugging. Its raison d’étre is convenience, not robustness; print streams ignore many issues involved in internationalization and error checking. This makesSystem.outeasy to use in quick-and-dirty hacks and simple examples, while simultaneously making it unsuitable for production code, which should use thejava.io.PrintWriterclass
PrintStreamis not limited to the console.PrintStreamis a filter stream and thus can be connected to any other output stream: aFileOutputStream, aByteArrayOutputStream, aTelnetOutputStream, or anything else you write to. Three constructors can be used to chain aPrintStreamto an underlying stream:

public PrintStream(OutputStream out)
public PrintStream(OutputStream out, boolean autoFlush)
public PrintStream(OutputStream out, boolean autoFlush, String encoding)
throws UnsupportedEncodingException

Java Print Streams - Print Versus Write

:

The reason you might choose a PrintStream instead of a raw OutputStream is for its print()andprintln()methods. These methods each convert their argument to aStringand then convert theStringto bytes in a specific encoding before writing it to the underlying output stream. For example, consider thisPrintStreamconnected to a file named numbers.dat:

PrintStream out = new PrintStream(new FileOutputStream("numbers.dat"));

Suppose we use a simple for loop to write the numbers from 0 to 127 in that file:

for (int i = 0; i <= 127; i++) out.write(i);

When we’re done, the file contains 128 bytes: the first byte is 0, the second is 1, the third is 2, and so on. It’s pure binary data. If you try to open it up in a texteditor. you’ll see goop, as shown in Figure 7-1. Some of those binary numbers happen to be interpretable as ASCII text, but that’s an accident. They’re really just bytes. Many of them aren’t printable.


Figure 7-1. A binary file in a text editor

Now suppose instead of using thewrite()method we use theprint()method:

for (int i = 0; i <= 127; i++) out.print(i);

This time thePrintStreamdoes not write raw binary data in the file. Instead, it converts each number into its ASCII string equivalent and writes that string. For instance, instead of writing the byte 20, it writes the character 2 followed by the character 0. If you open the file in a text editor now, you’ll see something like the screenshot shown in Figure 7-2.


Figure 7-2. A text file in a text editor

It’s not absolutely guaranteed that the string will be written in ASCII. On a few IBM mainframes, EBCDIC might be used instead. However, given the range of characters used here, it’s pretty likely that the resulting file will make sense when interpreted as ASCII. More on this point shortly.

Theprintln()method prints a platform-specific line terminator after printing its argument. Suppose instead of using theprint()method we use theprintln()method:

for (int i = 0; i <= 127; i++) out.println(i);

Then the output is even neater, as shown in Figure 7-3.

These examples used ints, but thePrintStream class hasprint()andprintln( )methods for every Java data type. The method signatures are:

public void print(boolean b)
public void print(char c)
public void print(int i)
public void print(long l)
public void print(float f)
public void print(double d)
public void print(char[] s)
public void print(String s)
public void print(Object o)
public void println(boolean b)
public void println(char c)
public void println(int i)
public void println(long l)
public void println(float f)
public void println(double d)
public void println(char[] s)
public void println(String s)
public void println(Object o)

You can pass anything at all to aprint()method. Whatever argument you supply is guaranteed to match at least one of these methods. Object types are converted to


Figure 7-3. A text file with line breaks

strings by invoking theirtoString()methods. Primitive types are converted with the appropriateString.valueOf()methods.

One aspect of makingSystem.outsimple for quick jobs is not in thePrintStream class at all, but in the compiler. Because Java overloads the+operator to signify concatenation of strings, primitive data types, and objects, you can pass multiple variables to theprint()andprintln()methods, which are then converted to strings and concatenated. For example, consider the line:

System.out.println("As of " + (new Date()) + " there have been over "
+ hits + " hits on the web site." );

The compiler rewrites this complicated expression as:

StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer();
sb.append("As of ");
Date d = new Date();
sb.append(d);
sb.append(" there have been over ");
sb.append(hits);
sb.append(" hits on the web site.")
String s = sb.toString();
System.out.println(s);

TheStringBuffer append()method is overloaded in much the same way that theprint()andprintln()methods are; as a result, it can handle any Java data type.

Java Print Streams - Line Breaks

:

As previously mentioned, the println() method always adds a line break at the end of each line it prints. You can even call println() with no arguments to print just a line break:

public void println()

The line break character varies from platform to platform. In particular:

On Unix (including Mac OS X), it’s a linefeed,\n, ASCII 10.
On Mac OS 9, it’s a carriage return,\r, ASCII 13.
On Windows, it’s a carriage return linefeed pair,\r\n, ASCII 13 followed by ASCII 10.
This is almost never what you actually want!

Most file formats and most network protocols care a great deal about which line break character is written.* For instance, if you’re writing a web client or server, the HTTP specification requires that header lines end with carriage return linefeed pairs. It doesn’t matter whether the client or server is a Mac, a PC, a Unix workstation, or a Palm Pilot. It must use\r\nas the line break. You can specify this by explicitly passing the line break you want to theprint()method rather than callingprintln(). For example:

for (int i = 0; i <= 127; i++) {
out.print(i);
out.print("\r\n");
}

In practice, most HTTP servers and clients accept requests that use the wrong line breaks. However, some aren’t so forgiving, and you really shouldn’t count on this behavior.

If for some reason you want to know which line break character will be used, theline.separatorsystem property will tell you:

String lineBreak = System.getProperty("line.separator");

Not all line breaks are created equal. If thePrintStream is set toautoFlush—that is, if the second argument to the constructor istrue—after every call toprintln()and after every linefeed that’s printed, the underlying stream will be flushed. Thus,out.println()andout.print("\n")both flush the stream. So doesout.print("\r\n"), because it contains a linefeed. However,out.print("\r")does not cause an automatic flush.


Java Print Streams - Error Handling

:

You may have noticed something a little funny with the code fragments in this chapter: I haven’t put any try-catch blocks around them. That’s not an oversight. PrintStream methods never throw IOExceptions. Each method in the class catchesIOException. When an exception occurs, an internal flag is set totrue. You can test this flag using thecheckError()method:

public boolean checkError()

This method returnstrueif this print stream has ever encountered an error during its lifetime. Most of the time, you just ignore this, since print streams are only used in situations where exhaustive error checking is unnecessary.

There’s also a protectedsetError()method you can use to signal an error from a subclass:

protected void setError()

Once an error has been set, there’s no way to unset it. Generally, once aPrintStreamhas encountered an error, all further writes to it silently fail. It’s not the failure but the silence that makesPrintStream unsuitable for most applications.

printf()
I was inspired to write the first edition of this book by the numerous questions I received about why there was no printf() function in Java. Part of the goal of that edition was to explain to readers why they didn’t actually need it. Thus, I was a little perturbed when Java 5 added printf(). Personally, I still don’t think Java needs printf(), but it’s here now, so let’s talk about it.

Theprintf()method makes heavy use of Java 5’s new varargs feature. That is, a single method definition can support any number of arguments. In this case, the signature is:

public PrintStream printf(String format, Object... args)

A typical invocation looks like this:

System.out.printf("There are %f centimeters in %f inches.", 2.54*inches, inches);

If you’re an old C hack, this is like coming home. The first argument is a format string containing both literal text and tags beginning with percent signs (%). To form the output, each tag is replaced by the corresponding argument that follows the format string. If the format string is the zeroth argument, the first tag is replaced by the first argument, the second tag by the second argument, and so forth. If there are more tags than arguments,printf()throws ajava.util.MissingFormatArgumentException. This is a subclass ofIllegalFormatException, which is a runtime exception, so you don’t have to catch it. If there are more arguments than tags, the extra arguments are silently ignored.

Printf()

The letter(s) after the percent sign in the format tag specify how the number is interpreted. For instance,%fmeans that the number is formatted as a floating-point number with a decimal sign.%dformats the argument as a decimal integer.%xformats the number as a hexadecimal integer.%Xalso formats the number as a hexadecimal integer but uses the uppercase letters A–F instead of the lowercase letters a–f to represent 10–15.

Most of the time, changing a lowercase conversion specifier to uppercase changes the formatted string from lowercase to uppercase. However, there are a few exceptions to this rule.

There are a couple of dozen tags for different kinds of data. Not all data is compatible. For instance, if you use%xto format adouble as a hexadecimal integer,printf()throws ajava.util.IllegalFormatConversionException. Again, this is a runtime exception and a subclass ofIllegalFormatException.

So far, this isn’t anything that can’t be done easily withprintln()and string concatenation. What makesprintf()more convenient for some uses is that the tags can also contain width and precision specifiers. For example, suppose we wrote the previous statement like this instead:

System.out.printf("There are %.3f centimeters in %.2f feet.", 2.54*feet, feet);

%.3fmeans that the centimeters will be formatted as a decimal number with exactly three digits after the decimal point.%.2fmeans that the number will be rounded to only two decimal places. This gives more legible output, like “There are 21.691 centimeters in 8.54 feet” instead of “There are 21.690925 centimeters in 8.539734 feet.”

A number before the decimal point in the format tag specifies the minimum width of the formatted string. For instance,%7.3fformats a decimal number exactly seven characters wide with exactly three digits after the decimal point. Those seven characters include the decimal point, so there will be exactly three digits to the left of the decimal point. If the number is smaller than 100, it will be padded on the left with spaces to make seven characters. Zeros will be added to the right of the decimal point if necessary to pad it to three decimal places.

Consider this Java 1.4 code fragment that prints a three-column table of the angles between 0 and 360 degrees in degrees, radians, and grads, using onlyprintln():

for (double degrees = 0.0; degrees <>
double radians = Math.PI * degrees / 180.0;
double grads = 400 * degrees / 360;
System.out.println(degrees + " " + radians + " " + grads);
}

Its output looks like this (not very pretty):

0.0 0.0 0.0
1.0 0.017453292519943295 1.1111111111111112
2.0 0.03490658503988659 2.2222222222222223
3.0 0.05235987755982988 3.3333333333333335
...

In Java 5,printf()can easily format each number exactly five characters wide with one digit after the decimal point:

for (double degrees = 0.0; degrees <>
double radians = Math.PI * degrees / 180.0;
double grads = 400 * degrees / 360;
System.out.printf("%5.1f %5.1f %5.1f\n", degrees , radians, grads);
}

Here’s the start of the output:

0.0 0.0 0.0
1.0 0.0 1.1
2.0 0.0 2.2
3.0 0.1 3.3
...

Notice how nicely everything lines up in a monospaced font? This is incredibly useful for the two dozen programmers using Java to generate reports for VT-100 terminals and letter-quality printouts on green-and-white barred computer paper. (Those readers who haven’t written any software like that since 1984, and certainly those readers who weren’t even born in 1984, should now see why I’m less than thrilled with the addition of this 1970s technology to a 21st-century language.)

Of course, programmers printing text in proportional-width fonts, GUI table components, HTML reports, XML documents styled with XSL stylesheets, and any other output format produced since 1992 may be less enamored of this style of programming. Anyway, Java has it now. You don’t have to use it (or read the rest of this chapter) if you don’t need it.


Java Print Streams - Formatter

:
In fact, printf() is a little more general than System.out (though that’s its primary justification). Besides printf(), the PrintStreamclass also has aformat()method:

public PrintStream format(String format, Object... args)

This does exactly the same thing asprintf(). That is, the previous example could be rewritten like this and produce identical output:

for (double degrees = 0.0; degrees <>
double radians = Math.PI * degrees / 180.0;
double grads = 400 * degrees / 360;
System.out.format("%5.1f %5.1f %5.1f\n", degrees , radians, grads);
}

Why two methods, then? Theformat()method is used not just byPrintStreambut also by thejava.util.Formatterclass:

public class Formatter implements Flushable, Closeable

printf()is there solely to make C programmers feel nostalgic.

Formatteris the object-oriented equivalent ofsprintf()andfprintf()in C. Rather than writing its output onto the console, it writes it into a string, a file, or an output stream. Pass the object you want to write into to theFormatterconstructor. For example, this code fragment creates aFormatterthat writes data into a file named angles.txt:

Formatter formatter = new Formatter("angles.txt");

Once you’ve created aFormatterobject, you can write to it using theformat()method just as you would withSystem.out.format(), except that the output goes into the file rather than onto the console:

for (double degrees = 0.0; degrees <>
double radians = Math.PI * degrees / 180.0;
double grads = 400 * degrees / 360;
formatter.format("%5.1f %5.1f %5.1f\n", degrees , radians, grads);
}

Formatters are not output streams, but they can and should be flushed and closed just the same:

formatter.flush();
formatter.close();

Friday, October 8, 2010

Code Examples Code

I want to show you one funny thing!

The code is shown below is simplest that you can imagine and does very unusual thing!
It is slightly bigger than "Hello World!" program but does much more.
It lists all files in the current directory if you run it like this:
java test *
(of course after compilation) in DOS/CMD prompt on Windows or in any shell in UNIX.
The program shows all files both in Unix and Windows.
If you do: java test .*
on UNIX it also shows all hidden files.

class test{
public static void main(String args[]){
for (int i = 0;i <>
System.out.println("File " + i + ":" + args[i]);
}
if (args.length<=0) {
System.out.println("No files!");
}
}
}

What is a Programming Language?

What Does A Programming Language Do?:

A programming language is used to write computer programs such as

Applications
Utilities
Servers
Systems Programs

A program is written as a series of human understandable computer instructions that can be read by a compiler and linker, and translated into machine code so that a computer can understand and run it.


Are There Many Programs In A Computer?:

From the moment you turn on your computer, it is running programs, carrying out instructions, testing your ram, resetting all attached devices and loading the operating system from hard disk or CD-Rom.

Each and every operation that your computer performs has instructions that someone had to write in a programming language. These had to be created, compiled and tested- a long and complex task.

An operating system like Microsoft's Windows Vista took millions of man hours to write and test the software.



Examples Of Programming Languages:

These languages include Assembler, C or C++. A computer motherboard with the CPU, RAM and ROM), the instructions to boot the computer are limited to a small amount of memory in the boot ROM chip and so are usually written in assembler. Operating systems like Linux or Windows are written in C and C++.

Traditional Programming Languages:

In the late 40s and early 50s, computer programs were entered by flicking switches. It was quickly realised how inefficient and slow that was and computer languages soon appeared.

Thousands of programming languages have been invented since then, many as PhD research projects, but only a few have been really successful. Through the 60s and 70s, these languages :

Fortran
Cobol
Basic
all ruled the roost but declined when better languages came into being. Basic hung in there the longest but is now declining.



What Programming Languages Are Now In Use?:

It is mainly Java and C++ with C# starting to gain popularity and C holding its own. There have been many attempts to automate this process, and have computers write computer programs but the complexity is such that for now, humans still write the best computer programs.


The Future Of Programming Languages:

The most popular programming languages are currently :

C
C++
Java
As computers get faster, have more RAM, applications will get more complex, it is likely that more development will shift from C++ to the higher level languages such as Java and C#.
Microsoft have put a lot of faith in C# as their answer to Java and have the financial leverage to continue plugging it for a very long time. I expect both Java and C# to become the two dominant programming languages.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Java Interview Question


1. What is the difference between private, protected, and public?

These keywords are for allowing privileges to components such as java methods and variables.
Public: accessible to all classes
Private: accessible only to the class to which they belong
Protected: accessible to the class to which they belong and any subclasses.
Access specifiers are keywords that determines the type of access to the member of a class. These are:
* Public
* Protected
* Private
* Defaults

2. What's the difference between an interface and an abstract class? Also discuss the similarities. (Very Important)

Abstract class is a class which contain one or more abstract methods, which has to be implemented by sub classes. Interface is a Java Object containing method declaration and doesn't contain implementation. The classes which have implementing the Interfaces must provide the method definition for all the methods
Abstract class is a Class prefix with a abstract keyword followed by Class definition. Interface is a Interface which starts with interface keyword.
Abstract class contains one or more abstract methods. where as Interface contains all abstract methods and final declarations
Abstract classes are useful in a situation that Some general methods should be implemented and specialization behavior should be implemented by child classes. Interfaces are useful in a situation that all properties should be implemented.

Differences are as follows:

* 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 to find corresponding method in in the actual class. Abstract classes are fast.

Similarities:

* Neither Abstract classes or Interface can be instantiated.

How to define an Abstract class?
A class containing abstract method is called Abstract class. An Abstract class can't be instantiated.
Example of Abstract class:

abstract class testAbstractClass {
protected String myString;
public String getMyString() {
return myString;
}
public abstract string anyAbstractFunction();
}

How to define an Interface?
Answer: In Java Interface defines the methods but does not implement them. Interface can include constants. A class that implements the interfaces is bound to implement all the methods defined in Interface.
Example of Interface:

public interface sampleInterface {
public void functionOne();
public long CONSTANT_ONE = 1000;
}

3. Question: How you can force the garbage collection?

Garbage collection automatic process and can't be forced. You could request it by calling System.gc(). JVM does not guarantee that GC will be started immediately.

Garbage collection is one of the most important feature of Java, Garbage collection is also called automatic memory management as JVM automatically removes the unused variables/objects (value is null) from the memory. User program can't directly free the object from memory, instead it is the job of the garbage collector to automatically free the objects that are no longer referenced by a program. Every class inherits finalize() method from java.lang.Object, the finalize() method is called by garbage collector when it determines no more references to the object exists. In Java, it is good idea to explicitly assign null into a variable when no more in use. I Java on 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.

4. What's the difference between constructors and normal methods?

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 and it can return a value or can be void.

5. Can you call one constructor from another if a class has multiple constructors

Yes. Use this() to call a constructor from an other constructor.

6. Explain the usage of Java packages.

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.

7. Explain in your own words the "bottom line" benefits of the use of an interface.

The interface makes it possible for a method in one class to invoke methods on objects of other classes, without the requirement to know the true class of those objects, provided that those objects are all instantiated from classes that implement one or more specified interfaces. In other words, objects of classes that implement specified interfaces can be passed into methods of other objects as the generic type Object, and the methods of the other objects can invoke methods on the incoming objects by first casting them as the interface type.

8. What are some advantages and disadvantages of Java Sockets?

Some advantages of Java Sockets:
Sockets are flexible and sufficient. Efficient socket based programming can be easily implemented for general communications. Sockets cause low network traffic. Unlike HTML forms and CGI scripts that generate and transfer whole web pages for each new request, Java applets can send only necessary updated information.

Some disadvantages of Java Sockets:
Security restrictions are sometimes overbearing because a Java applet running in a Web browser is only able to establish connections to the machine where it came from, and to nowhere else on the network Despite all of the useful and helpful Java features, Socket based communications allows only to send packets of raw data between applications. Both the client-side and server-side have to provide mechanisms to make the data useful in any way.

9. Explain the usage of the keyword transient?

Transient 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).

10. What's the difference between the methods sleep() and wait()

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.

11. What would you use to compare two String variables - the operator == or the method equals()?

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.

12. Why would you use a synchronized block vs. synchronized method?

Synchronized blocks place locks for shorter periods than synchronized methods.

13. What access level do you need to specify in the class declaration to ensure that only classes from the same directory can access it?

You do not need to specify any access level, and Java will use a default package access level.

14. Can an inner class declared inside of a method access local variables of this method?

It's possible if these variables are final.

15. What can go wrong if you replace && with & in the following code:
String a=null; if (a!=null && a.length()>10) {...}

A single ampersand here would lead to a NullPointerException.

16. What's the main difference between a Vector and an ArrayList?

Java Vector class is internally synchronized and ArrayList is not synchronized.

17. Describe the wrapper classes in Java.

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

18. How could Java classes direct program messages to the system console, but error messages, say to a file?

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);

19. How do you know if an explicit object casting is needed?

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;

20. When you assign a subclass to a variable having a supeclass type, the casting is performed automatically. Can you write a Java class that could be used both as an applet as well as an application?

Yes. Add a main() method to the applet.

21. If a class is located in a package, what do you need to change in the OS environment to be able to use it?

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.javIn 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

22. What's the difference between J2SDK 1.5 and J2SDK 5.0?

There's no difference, Sun Microsystems just re-branded this version.

23. Does it matter in what order catch statements for FileNotFoundException and IOExceptipon are written?

Yes, it does. The FileNoFoundException is inherited from the IOException. Exception's subclasses have to be caught first.

24. Name the containers which uses Border Layout as their default layout?

Containers which uses Border Layout as their default are: window, Frame and Dialog classes.

25. 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?

ArrayList

26. When should the method invokeLater()be used?

This method is used to ensure that Swing components are updated through the event-dispatching thread.

27. How can a subclass call a method or a constructor defined in a superclass?

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.

28. What do you understand by Synchronization?

Synchronization is a process of controlling the access of shared resources by the multiple threads in such a manner that only one thread can access one resource at a time. In non synchronized multithreaded application, it is possible for one thread to modify a shared object while another thread is in the process of using or updating the object's value. Synchronization prevents such type of data corruption.
E.g. Synchronizing a function:
public synchronized void Method1 () {
// Appropriate method-related code.
}
E.g. Synchronizing a block of code inside a function:
public myFunction (){
synchronized (this) {
// Synchronized code here.
}
}

29. What's the difference between a queue and a stack?

Stacks works by last-in-first-out rule (LIFO), while queues use the FIFO rule

30. 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?

Sometimes. But your class may be a descendent of another class and in this case the interface is your only option.

31. If you're overriding the method equals() of an object, which other method you might also consider?

hashCode()

32. What is Collection API?

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.

33. How would you make a copy of an entire Java object with its state?

Have this class implement Cloneable interface and call its method clone().

34. How can you minimize the need of garbage collection and make the memory use more effective?

Use object pooling and weak object references.

35. 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?

If these classes are threads I'd consider notify() or notifyAll(). For regular classes you can use the Observer interface.

36. Explain the Encapsulation principle.

Encapsulation is a process of binding or wrapping the data and the codes that operates on the data into a single entity. This keeps the data safe from outside interface and misuse. One way to think about encapsulation is as a protective wrapper that prevents code and data from being arbitrarily accessed by other code defined outside the wrapper.

37. Explain the Inheritance principle.

Inheritance is the process by which one object acquires the properties of another object.

38. Explain the Polymorphism principle.

The meaning of Polymorphism is something like one name many forms. Polymorphism enables one entity to be used as as general category for different types of actions. The specific action is determined by the exact nature of the situation. The concept of polymorphism can be explained as "one interface, multiple methods".
From a practical programming viewpoint, polymorphism exists in three distinct forms in Java:

* Method overloading
* Method overriding through inheritance
* Method overriding through the Java interface

39. Is Iterator a Class or Interface? What is its use?

Iterator is an interface which is used to step through the elements of a Collection.

40. Explain the user defined Exceptions?

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
}


41. What is OOPS?

OOP is the common abbreviation for Object-Oriented Programming.
There are three main principals of oops which are called Polymorphism, Inheritance and Encapsulation.

39. Read the following program:

public class test {
public static void main(String [] args) {
int x = 3;
int y = 1;
if (x = y)
System.out.println("Not equal");
else
System.out.println("Equal");
}
}

What is the result?
The output is “Equal”
B. The output in “Not Equal”
C. An error at " if (x = y)" causes compilation to fall.
D. The program executes but no output is show on console.
Answer: C
Answer: Transient variable can't be serialize. For example if a variable is declared as transient in a Serializable class and the class is written to an ObjectStream, the value of the variable can't be written to the stream instead when the class is retrieved from the ObjectStream the value of the variable becomes null.

# Question: Name the containers which uses Border Layout as their default layout?
Answer: Containers which uses Border Layout as their default are: window, Frame and Dialog classes.

# Question: What do you understand by Synchronization?
Answer: Synchronization is a process of controlling the access of shared resources by the multiple threads in such a manner that only one thread can access one resource at a time. In non synchronized multithreaded application, it is possible for one thread to modify a shared object while another thread is in the process of using or updating the object's value. Synchronization prevents such type of data corruption.
E.g. Synchronizing a function:
public synchronized void Method1 () {
// Appropriate method-related code.
}
E.g. Synchronizing a block of code inside a function:
public myFunction (){
synchronized (this) {
// Synchronized code here.
}
}

Overview of Java Programming

The only information we have available at this time about Java is a series of URL's to direct you to information about Java. The author of the tutorials has considerable experience with Java and will be placing additional information about Java here. It is just a matter of finding the time to do it.
Java is an object-oriented programming language developed by Sun Microsystems in the early 1990s. The language is very similar in syntax to C and C++ but, in techie terms, it has a simpler object model and fewer low-level facilities.

History of Java Programming:-

Java was started as a project called "Oak" by James Gosling in 1991. The first public implementation was Java 1.0 in 1995. The pluses to this new language were:

It promised the ability to "Write Once, Run Anywhere" (WORA), providing no cost runtimes on popular platforms, and
Its security was configurable, allowing network and file access to be restricted.
Java quickly became a popular programming language. Newer versions of the java programming language had multiple configurations built for different platforms. For example, J2EE for enterprise applications and J2ME for mobile applications.

Learning Java Programming:-

Java programming is best learned by those with some familiarity with object oriented programming methodologies. For those interested in introductory-level java programming, courses offered through local community collages would be a good place to start. For those developers interested in learning java programming at a more detailed, in-depth level, Sun Microsystems offers several java programming classes and certification programs.