How does 'instanceof' work with interface?
An instanceof interface expression always allowed at compile time if the left hand of instance's class is not defined as final class. If the compiler can determine at compile time that the left hand side can never be casted to the interface, that's a compile time error. If the class is not a final class, the compiler can not determine what interfaces are implemented by it. Even if the class does not implement the interface, but one of its subclass might. If the actually object class does not implement the interface then you will get "false" at runtime.
interface MyInterface {}
class MyObject {}
public class Program {
public static void main(String[] args) {
MyObject obj = new MyObject();
String s = "hello";
// false, but legal
System.out.println(obj instanceof MyInterface);
// compiler error, String is final class
System.out.println(s instanceof MyInterface);
}
}
Most Recent java Faqs
- How to uncompress a file in the gzip format?
- How to make a gzip file in Java?
- How to use Java String.split method to split a string by dot?
- How to validate URL in Java?
- How to schedule a job in Java?
- How to return the content in the correct encoding from a servlet?
- What is the difference between JDK and JRE?
Most Viewed java Faqs
- How to read input from console (keyboard) in Java?
- How to use HttpURLConnection POST data to web server?
- How to add BASIC Authentication into HttpURLConnection?
- How to Retrieve Multiple Result Sets from a Stored Procedure in JDBC?
- What are class variables in Java?
- What are local variables in Java?
- How to Use Updatable ResultSet in JDBC?