How are arrays implemented in java?
Arrays are implemented as objects in java right? If so, where could I look at the source code for the array class. I am wondering if the length variable in arrays is defined as a constant and if so why it isn't in all capital letters LENGTH to make the code more understandable.
Solution 1:
Although arrays are Objects in the sense that they inherit java.lang.Object, the classes are created dynamically as a special feature of the language. They are not defined in source code.
Consider this array:
MySpecialCustomObject[] array;
There is no such source code for that. You have created it in code dynamically.
The reason why length is in lower case and a field is really about the fact that the later Java coding standards didn't exist at the time this was developed. If an array was being developed today, it would probably be a method: getLength().
Length is a final field defined at object construction, it isn't a constant, so some coding standards would not want that to be in upper case. However in general in Java today everything is generally either done as a constant in upper case or marked private with a public getter method, even if it is final.
Solution 2:
For every Array we declare, corresponding classes are there in Java but it's not available to us.You can see the classes by using getClass().getName()
int[] arr=new int[10];
System.out.println(arr.getClass().getName());
Output : [I
where "[" represents one dimension array and "I" represents Integer. Similarly, we can have
[F for one-dimensional float arrays
[Z for one-dimensional boolean arrays
[J for one-dimensional long arrays
[[I for two-dimensional int arrays
and so on.