Why Java is comparing (this == another String) inside equalsIgnoreCase method for checking a string insensitive?
Also, String equals is comparing (this == another String) to compare two objects?
Java 6: String Class equalsIgnoreCase implementation given below.
public boolean equalsIgnoreCase(String anotherString) {
return (this == anotherString) ? true :
(anotherString != null) && (anotherString.count == count) &&
regionMatches(true, 0, anotherString, 0, count);
}
Java 6: String Class equals implementation given below.
public boolean equals(Object anObject) {
if (this == anObject) {
return true;
}
Why Java is comparing (this == another String) inside equalsIgnoreCase method for checking a string insensitive?
It's an optimization. If the reference passed in is exactly the same as this, then equals must return true, but we don't need to look at any fields etc. Everything is the same as itself. From the documentation for Object.equals(Object):
The equals method implements an equivalence relation on non-null object references:
- It is reflexive: for any non-null reference value x, x.equals(x) should return true.
- ...
It's very common for an equality check to start with:
this? If so, return true.Then you go on to type-specific checks.
== is true when comparing with the same object - given an efficiency increase more likely than just about any other class due to String interning.
Note that this code:
return (this == anotherString) ? true : <rest of line>
could have been written (more elegantly IMHO) as:
return this == anotherString || <rest of line>
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