A constructor is a special type of function that gets called every time you initialize a class, constructor has the same name as class name. Constructor has no return type not even void. We can pass the parameters to the constructor.
-this() is used to invoke a constructor of the same class.
-super() is used to invoke a super class constructor.
Constructor is called immediately after the object is created before the new operator completes.
For example, say you have this class called Person:
class Person
{
public Person ()
{
Console.WriteLine("We're making a new person");
}
}
Now you can create a new object of type Person, like this:
Person Tim= new person();
The program will write the line "We're making a new person" to the screen.
class Person
{
public Person ()
{
Console.WriteLine("We're making a new person");
}
}
Now you can create a new object of type Person, like this:
Person Tim= new person();
The program will write the line "We're making a new person" to the screen.
- Constructor can use the access modifiers public, protected, private or have no access modifier
- Constructor can not use the modifiers abstract, static, final, native, synchronized or strictfp
- Constructor can be overloaded, we cannot override.
- You cannot use this() and Super() in the same constructor.
- You can not have both super() and this() invocation in the same constructor.
- Either super() or this() should be the first statement in the constructor.





2 Comments:
Java 1.5 language features..
http://www.javatechpage.in/2012/04/java-15-language-features.html
Java 1.5 language features..
http://www.javatechpage.in/2012/04/java-15-language-features.html
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