Object and Classes
An object in Java is the physical as well as a logical entity, whereas, a class in Java
is a logical entity only.
What is an object in Java
An entity that has state and behavior is known as an object e.g., chair, bike,
marker, pen, table, car, etc. It can be physical or logical (tangible and intangible).
The example of an intangible object is the banking system.
An object has three characteristics:
State: represents the data (value) of an object.
Behavior: represents the behavior (functionality) of an object such as deposit,
withdraw, etc.
Identity: An object identity is typically implemented via a unique ID. The value of
the ID is not visible to the external user. However, it is used internally by the JVM
to identify each object uniquely.
For Example, Pen is an object. Its name is Reynolds; color is white, known as its
state. It is used to write, so writing is its behavior.
An object is an instance of a class. A class is a template or blueprint from which
objects are created. So, an object is the instance(result) of a class.
Object Definitions:
An object is a real-world entity.
An object is a runtime entity.
The object is an entity which has state and behavior.
The object is an instance of a class.
What is a class in Java
A class is a group of objects which have common properties. It is a template or
blueprint from which objects are created. It is a logical entity. It can't be physical.
A class in Java can contain:
Fields
Methods
Constructors
Blocks
Nested class and interface
Syntax to declare a class:
class <class_name>{
field;
method;
Instance variable in Java
A variable which is created inside the class but outside the method is known as an
instance variable. Instance variable doesn't get memory at compile time. It gets
memory at runtime when an object or instance is created. That is why it is known
as an instance variable.
Method in Java
In Java, a method is like a function which is used to expose the behavior of an
object.
Advantage of Method
Code Reusability
Code Optimization
new keyword in Java
The new keyword is used to allocate memory at runtime. All objects get memory
in Heap memory area.
Object and Class Example: main within the class
In this example, we have created a Student class which has two data members id
and name. We are creating the object of the Student class by new keyword and
printing the object's value.
Here, we are creating a main() method inside the class.
File: Student.java
//Java Program to illustrate how to define a class and fields
//Defining a Student class.
class Student{
//defining fields
int id;//field or data member or instance variable
String name;
//creating main method inside the Student class
public static void main(String args[]){
//Creating an object or instance
Student s1=new Student();//creating an object of Student
//Printing values of the object
System.out.println(s1.id);//accessing member through reference variable
System.out.println(s1.name);
}
Output:
null
Object and Class Example: main outside the class
In real time development, we create classes and use it from another class. It is a
better approach than previous one. Let's see a simple example, where we are
having main() method in another class.
We can have multiple classes in different Java files or single Java file. If you define
multiple classes in a single Java source file, it is a good idea to save the file name
with the class name which has main() method.
File: TestStudent1.java
//Java Program to demonstrate having the main method in
//another class
//Creating Student class.
class Student{
int id;
String name;
//Creating another class TestStudent1 which contains the main method
class TestStudent1{
public static void main(String args[]){
Student s1=new Student();
System.out.println(s1.id);
System.out.println(s1.name);
Output:
null
3 Ways to initialize object
There are 3 ways to initialize object in Java.
By reference variable
By method
By constructor
1) Object and Class Example: Initialization through reference
Initializing an object means storing data into the object. Let's see a simple
example where we are going to initialize the object through a reference variable.
File: TestStudent2.java
class Student{
int id;
String name;
class TestStudent2{
public static void main(String args[]){
Student s1=new Student();
s1.id=101;
s1.name="Sonoo";
System.out.println(s1.id+" "+s1.name);//printing members with a white space
Output:
101 Sonoo
We can also create multiple objects and store information in it through reference
variable.
File: TestStudent3.java
class Student{
int id;
String name;
class TestStudent3{
public static void main(String args[]){
//Creating objects
Student s1=new Student();
Student s2=new Student();
//Initializing objects
s1.id=101;
s1.name="Sonoo";
s2.id=102;
s2.name="Amit";
//Printing data
System.out.println(s1.id+" "+s1.name);
System.out.println(s2.id+" "+s2.name);
Output:
101 Sonoo
102 Amit
2) Object and Class Example: Initialization through method
In this example, we are creating the two objects of Student class and initializing
the value to these objects by invoking the insertRecord method. Here, we are
displaying the state (data) of the objects by invoking the displayInformation()
method.
File: TestStudent4.java
class Student{
int rollno;
String name;
void insertRecord(int r, String n){
rollno=r;
name=n;
void displayInformation(){System.out.println(rollno+" "+name);}
class TestStudent4{
public static void main(String args[]){
Student s1=new Student();
Student s2=new Student();
s1.insertRecord(111,"Karan");
s2.insertRecord(222,"Aryan");
s1.displayInformation();
s2.displayInformation();
Output:
111 Karan
222 Aryan
As you can see in the above figure, object gets the memory in heap memory area.
The reference variable refers to the object allocated in the heap memory area.
Here, s1 and s2 both are reference variables that refer to the objects allocated in
memory.
3) Object and Class Example: Initialization through a constructor
We will learn about constructors in Java later.
Object and Class Example: Employee
Let's see an example where we are maintaining records of employees.
File: TestEmployee.java
class Employee{
int id;
String name;
float salary;
void insert(int i, String n, float s) {
id=i;
name=n;
salary=s;
void display(){System.out.println(id+" "+name+" "+salary);}
public class TestEmployee {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Employee e1=new Employee();
Employee e2=new Employee();
Employee e3=new Employee();
e1.insert(101,"ajeet",45000);
e2.insert(102,"irfan",25000);
e3.insert(103,"nakul",55000);
e1.display();
e2.display();
e3.display();
}
Output:
101 ajeet 45000.0
102 irfan 25000.0
103 nakul 55000.0
Object and Class Example: Rectangle
There is given another example that maintains the records of Rectangle class.
File: TestRectangle1.java
class Rectangle{
int length;
int width;
void insert(int l, int w){
length=l;
width=w;
void calculateArea(){System.out.println(length*width);}
class TestRectangle1{
public static void main(String args[]){
Rectangle r1=new Rectangle();
Rectangle r2=new Rectangle();
r1.insert(11,5);
r2.insert(3,15);
r1.calculateArea();
r2.calculateArea();
Output:
55
45
What are the different ways to create an object in Java?
There are many ways to create an object in java. They are:
By new keyword
By newInstance() method
By clone() method
By deserialization
By factory method etc.
We will learn these ways to create object later.
Anonymous object
Anonymous simply means nameless. An object which has no reference is known
as an anonymous object. It can be used at the time of object creation only.
If you have to use an object only once, an anonymous object is a good approach.
For example:
new Calculation();//anonymous object
Calling method through a reference:
Calculation c=new Calculation();
c.fact(5);
Calling method through an anonymous object
new Calculation().fact(5);
Let's see the full example of an anonymous object in Java.
class Calculation{
void fact(int n){
int fact=1;
for(int i=1;i<=n;i++){
fact=fact*i;
System.out.println("factorial is "+fact);
public static void main(String args[]){
new Calculation().fact(5);//calling method with anonymous object
Output:
Factorial is 120
Creating multiple objects by one type only
We can create multiple objects by one type only as we do in case of primitives.
Initialization of primitive variables:
int a=10, b=20;
Initialization of refernce variables:
Rectangle r1=new Rectangle(), r2=new Rectangle();//creating two objects
Let's see the example:
//Java Program to illustrate the use of Rectangle class which
//has length and width data members
class Rectangle{
int length;
int width;
void insert(int l,int w){
length=l;
width=w;
void calculateArea(){System.out.println(length*width);}
class TestRectangle2{
public static void main(String args[]){
Rectangle r1=new Rectangle(),r2=new Rectangle();//creating two objects
r1.insert(11,5);
r2.insert(3,15);
r1.calculateArea();
r2.calculateArea();
Output:
55
45