More than 3000 questions in repository. There are more than 900 unanswered questions. Click here and help us by providing the answer. Have a video suggestion. Click Correct / Improve and please let us know.
Ans. Lazy Initialization means , Load Dependencies when required. Which means less load on application resources as only required data is loaded upfront. It's not only good for better performance but for better resource utilization too.
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :
Ans. 1. Security and Safety - They can be shared across multiple threads as they are thread safe. Moreover, it protects then from bad state due to interception by the other code segment. One such problem due to mutability and access by alternate code segment could be the change of hash code and then the impact on its search with hash collections.
2. Reuse - In some cases they can be reused as only one copy would exist and hence it can be relied upon. For example - String Pool
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :
Ans. JVM (Java Virtual Machine) is an abstract machine. It is a specification that provides runtime environment in which java bytecode can be executed.JVMs are available for many hardware and software platforms (i.e. JVM is platform dependent).Runtime Instance Whenever you write java command on the command prompt to run the java class, an instance of JVM is createdThe JVM performs following operation:Loads codeVerifies codeExecutes codeProvides runtime environment
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :
Ans. Abstract classes provide a mechanism of interfacing ( using abstract method ) as well as code reuse through inheritance ( extending abstract class )
Comparing to concrete class they have an advantage of providing interface which a concrete class doesn't provide.
Comparing to interfaces they have an advantage of providing code reuse through inheritance which interfaces dont provide.
Ans. Enumeration can iterate only legacy collections like Vector , HashTable and Stack whereas Iterator can iterate both legacy and non legacy collections.
Enumeration is less safer than Iterator
Enumeration is fail safe whereas Iterator is fail fast
Iterator allows for removal of element while traversal whereas Enumeration doesn't have remove method.
Enumerations were introduced in Java 1 whereas Iterators were introduced with Java 2
Enumerations have methods like hasMoreElements and nextElement whereas Iterators have methods like hasNext, next and remove
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :
Ans. Object is an entity in Java , i.e which has a state ( instance variables ) and methods attached to it ( static or non static , through class definition ). References are the identifiers that are used to point to objects.
For example -
Employee emp = new Employee();
emp = new Employee();
In this code, emp is the reference that gets assigned to the new object created by the new operator. In the second line , we have assigned the same reference to another object. So with these 2 lines of code, we have 2 objects in memory with reference emp now pointing to second object.
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :
Ans. Encapsulation is a feature of OOP's that binds the data and it's associated methods together as a single unit and facilitate protection and data hiding by providing minimal interface to outside. For example - member variables are declared private and are accessed through public methods. Moreover we have private methods that can only be used internally and hence providing minimal interface to outside class through use of public methods.
Ans. You can implement encapsulation in Java by keeping the fields (class variables) private and providing public getter and setter methods to each of them. Java Beans are examples of fully encapsulated classes. Encapsulation in Java: Restricts direct access to data members (fields) of a class.
Help us improve. Please let us know the company, where you were asked this question :