I have some doubts regarding Strings
Are they live on Heap or String pool?
And if on Heap then they will be garbage collected, if they are not reachable by any live thread.
And if on String pool then how they will be deleted or removed because as we know Garbage Collection happens only on heap.
String s = new String("abc");
the string object referred by s will be on heap and the string literal "abc" will be in string pool. The objects in the string pool will not be garbage collected. They are there to be reused during the lifetime of the program, to improve the performance.
They are all stored in the heap, but intern()ed strings (including string literals in the source) are referenced from a pool in the String class.
If they appear as literals in the source code, including constant string expressions (e.g. "a" + "b") then they will also be referenced from the Class the appear in, which usually means they will last as long as the process runs.
Edit:
When you call intern() on a string in your code it is also added to this pool, but because it uses weak references the string can still be garbage collected if it is no longer in use.
See also: interned Strings : Java Glossary
Quote from that article:
The collection of Strings registered in this HashMap is sometimes called the String pool. However, they are ordinary Objects and live on the heap just like any other (perhaps in an optimised way since interned Strings tend to be long lived).
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