So I've heard that if I compare 2 strings with == then I will only get true back if they both refer to the same object/instance. That's strings. What about Booleans?
Does == check for full equality in Booleans? - Java
It depends on whether you're talking about Boolean
s (the object wrapper, note the capital B
) or boolean
s (the primitive, note the lower case b
). If you're talking about Boolean
s (the object wrapper), as with all objects, ==
checks for identity, not equivalence. If you're talking about boolean
s (primitives), it checks for equivalence.
So:
Boolean a, b;
a = new Boolean(false);
b = new Boolean(false);
System.out.println("a == b? " + (a == b)); // "a == b? false", because they're not the same instance
But
boolean c, d;
c = false;
d = false;
System.out.println("c == d? " + (c == d)); // "c == d? true", because they're primitives with the same value
Regarding strings:
I've heard that if I compare 2 strings with == then I will only get true back if the strings are identical and they both refer to the same object/instance...
It's not really an "and": ==
will only check whether the two String
variables refer to the same String
instance. Of course, one String
instance can only have one set of contents, so if both variables point to the same instance, naturally the contents are the same... :-) The key point is that ==
will report false
for different String
instances even if they have the same characters in the same order. That's why we use equals
on them, not ==
. Strings can get a bit confusing because of intern
ing, which is specific to strings (there's no equivalent for Boolean
, although when you use Boolean.valueOf(boolean)
, you'll get a cached object). Also note that Java doesn't have primitive strings like it does primitive boolean
, int
, etc.