@SeanDuggan Did you configure your Eclipse project to target Java 11? Eclipse has its own Java compiler built into it. It sounds like your project is configured to target the latest version that Eclipse supports (Java 16), and it is using the built-in compiler to build the project.
@SeanDuggan That's not the place I'm thinking of. There is a place in the project settings where you tell Eclipse which version of Java your code uses.
It may depend on what scale you're operating at. Traditionally, Big O gets simplified down to the largest exponent (so if you're algorithm is O(3n^3 + n^2 +5n), it just gets expressed as O(n^3) since, as the numbers get higher, the other items become less important).
Of course, they might combine depending on how you do things. If your outer method has an O(n) operation (maybe looping through the set) with an O(n^2) and an O(n) operation on each item, that might be considered an O(n^3) overall.
If you're reusing the same space every time (say, for every item in the array, you use the same n x n space rather than allocating a new one), then yes, it does not combine in the same way. On the other hand, if you are storing n different nxn spaces, then it is n^3 space.