@fge one could argue that if he doesn't know why List<int> doesn't work, perhaps he should avoid bleeding edge right now. We wouldn't want him to bleed TO DEATH
the memory a is like what you have in C when you are holding a pointer you can have a walk in the memory by incrementing the pointer but in java it is just a refernce that jvm gives you to manipulate you objects
I was taught the opposite; the object reference points to a memory spot where the object is and when the reference is the same they point to the same object in the memory.
No, what I mean is that a reference is an abstract notion by the JVM address for which only the JVM decides whether two references are the same or not
It just happens that the logical implementation of that is that they point to the same memory content
Nothing, in theory, REQUIRES that they point to the same memory content
Yes, call me pedantic all you want; I don't care, I just know that == in Java works like it is supposed to work. I just don't extrapolate a possible implementation and say "that is how it is done" unless it is documented to be how it's done, is all :p
i think you are right because java is VM so our code get executed but some engin of java further more all access to memory is managed by java and if the java can't allocate memmory it raises OutOfMemoryError
Really, if you can't tell that the only thing I was apparently wrong about in that is memory address in exchange for object reference I dunno what to do with you
But again, nothing in the literature of Java says that for two references r1 and r2, r1 == r2 means that they are exactly the same "memory piece" (and, again, of course, in practice, this happens to be the case in all implementations since that just makes sense)
I reason too much like a physician, I guess :p But had we stuck to "logical deductions", we would still believe that heavy bodies fell faster than lighter bodies, right?