Java Language Keywords
abstract Java Keyword
The abstract keyword may
modify a class or a method.
An abstract class can be
extended (subclassed) but cannot be instantiated directly.
An abstract method is not
implemented in the class in which it is declared, but must be overridden in
some subclass.
Examples
public abstract class
MyClass
{
}
public abstract String
myMethod();
Remarks
A class with an abstract
method is inherently abstract and must be declared abstract. An abstract class
cannot be instantiated.
A subclass of an abstract
class can only be instantiated if it implements all of the abstract methods of its superclass. Such
classes are called concrete classes to differentiate them from abstract
classes.
If a subclass of an
abstract class does not implement all of the abstract methods of its
superclass, the subclass is also abstract.
The abstract keyword cannot
be applied to methods that are static, private or final, since such methods cannot be overridden and
therefore cannot be implemented in subclasses.
No methods of a final class
may be abstract since a final class cannot be subclassed.
boolean Java Keyword
boolean is a Java primitive
type.
A boolean variable may take
on one of the values true or false.
Examples
boolean valid = true;
if (valid)
{
<statement>
}
Remarks
A boolean variable may only
take on the values true or false. A boolean may not be converted to or from any numeric type.
Expressions containing
boolean operands can contain only boolean operands.
The Boolean class is a
wrapper class for the boolean primitive type.
break Java Keyword
The break keyword is used
to prematurely exit a for, while, or do loop or to mark the end of a case block
in a switch statement.
Examples
for (i=0; i<max; i++)
{
if (<loop finished
early>)
{
break;
}
}
int type = <some
value>;
switch (type)
{
case 1:
<statement>
break;
case 2:
<statement>
break;
default:
<statement>
}
Remarks
break always exits the
innermost enclosing while, for, do or switch statement.
byte Java Keyword
byte is a Java primitive
type.
A byte can store an integer
value in the range [−128, 127].
Examples
byte b = 124;
Remarks
The Byte class is a wrapper
class for the byte primitive type. It defines MIN_VALUE and MAX_VALUE constants representing
the range of values for this type.
All integer literals in
Java are 32−bit int values unless the value is followed by l or L as in 235L, indicating the value should
be interpreted as a long.
case Java Keyword
The case is used to label
each branch in a switch statement.
Examples
int arg = <some
value>;
switch (arg)
{
case 1:
<statements>
break;
case 2:
<statements>
break;
default:
<statements>
break;
}
Remarks
A case block does not have
an implicit ending point. A break statement is typically used at the end of each case block to exit the
switch statement.
Without a break statement,
the flow of execution will flow into all following case and/or default blocks.
catch Java Keyword
The catch keyword is used
to define exception handling blocks in try−catch or try−catch−finally
statements.
Examples
try
{
<block that may throw
exceptions>
}
catch
(<java.lang.Exception or subclass> e)
{
<code to handle exception
e>
}
try
{
<block that may throw
different exceptions>
}
catch (FooException e)
{
<code to handle
FooException e>
}
catch (BarException e)
{
<code to handle
BarException e>
}
try
{
<block that may throw
exceptions>
}
catch
(<java.lang.Exception or subclass> e)
{
<code to handle exception
e>
}
finally
{
<statements that execute
with or without exception>
}
Remarks
The opening and closing
curly braces { and } are part of the syntax of the catch clause and may not be omitted even if the clause
contains a single statement.
Every try block must have
at least one catch or finally clause.
If a particular exception
class is not handled by any catch clause, the exception propagates up the call stack to the next enclosing
try block, recursively. If an exception is not caught by any enclosing try block, the Java interpreter will exit with an error message and stack trace.
char Java Keyword
char is a Java primitive
type.
A char variable can store a
single Unicode character.
Examples
char delimiter = ';';
Remarks
The following char
constants are available:
\b − Backspace
\f − Form feed
\n − Newline
\r − Carriage return
\t − Horizontal tab
\' − Single quote
\" − Double quote
\" − Backslash
\xxx − The Latin−1
character with the encoding xxx. The \x and \xx forms are legal but may lead to confusion.
\uxxxx − The Unicode character
with the hexadecimal encoding xxxx.
The Character class
includes useful static methods for dealing with char variables, including
isDigit(), isLetter(), isWhitespace()
and toUpperCase().
char values are unsigned.
class Java Keyword
The class keyword is used
to declare a new Java class, which is a collection of related variables and/or methods.
Classes are the basic
building blocks of object−oriented programming. A class typically represents
some real−world entity such as a
geometric Shape or a Person. A class is a template for an object. Every object
is an instance of a class.
To use a class, you
instantiate an object of the class, typically with the new operator, then call
the classes methods to access the
features of the class.
Examples
public class Rectangle
{
float width;
float height;
public Rectangle(float w,
float h)
{
width = w;
height = h;
}
public float getWidth()
{
return width;
}
public float getHeight()
{
return height;
}
}
Remarks
None.
continue Java Keyword
The continue keyword is
used to skip to the next iteration of a for, while, or do loop.
Examples
for (i=0; i<max; i++)
{
<statements>
if (<done with this
iteration>)
{
continue;
}
<statements>
}
Remarks
continue always skips to
the next iteration of the innermost enclosing while, for or do statement.
default Java Keyword
The default keyword is used
to label the default branch in a switch statement.
Examples
int arg = <some
value>;
switch (arg)
{
case 1:
<statements>
break;
case 2:
<statements>
break;
default:
<statements>
break;
}
Remarks
A default block does not
have an implicit ending point. A break statement is typically used at the end of each case or default
block to exit the switch statement upon completion of the block.
Without a default
statement, a switch statement whose argument matches no case blocks will do nothing.
do Java Keyword
The do keyword specifies a
loop whose condition is checked at the end of each iteration.
Examples
do
{
<statements>
}
while (!found);
Remarks
The body of a do loop is
always executed at least once.
The semicolon after the
condition expression is always required.
double Java Keyword
double is a Java primitive
type.
A double variable may store
a double−precision floating point value.
Examples
double ratio = .01;
double diameter = 6.15;
double height = 1.35E03; //
1.35 * 103 or 1350.0
double height = 1e−2; // 1.0
* 10−2 or
0.01
Remarks
Since floating point data
types are approximations of real numbers, you should generally never compare floating point
numbers for equality.
Java floating point numbers
can represent infinity and NaN (not a number). The Double wrapper
class defines the constants
MIN_VALUE, MAX_VALUE, NEGATIVE_INFINITY, POSITIVE_INFINITY and NaN.
else Java Keyword
The else keyword is always
used in association with the if keyword in an if−else statement. The else
clause is optional and is executed if
the if condition is false.
Examples
if (condition)
{
<statements>
}
else
{
<statements>
}
Remarks
None.
extends Java Keyword
The extends keyword is used
in a class or interface declaration to indicate that the class or interface
being declared is a subclass of
the class or interface whose name follows the extends keyword.
Examples
public class Rectangle
extends Polygon
{
}
Remarks
In the example above, the
Rectangle class inherits all of the public and protected variables and methods of the Polygon
class.
The Rectangle class may
override any non−final method of the Polygon class.
A class may only extend one
other class.
false Java Keyword
The false keyword
represents one of the two legal values for a boolean variable.
Examples
boolean isComplete = false;
Remarks
None.
final Java Keyword
The final keyword may be
applied to a class, indicating the class may not be extended (subclassed).
The final keyword may be
applied to a method, indicating the method may not be overridden in any
subclass.
Examples
public final class
MyFinalClass
{
}
public class MyClass
{
public final String
myFinalMethod()
{
<statements>
}
}
Remarks
A class may never be both
abstract and final. abstract means the class must be extended, while final means it cannot be.
A method may never be both
abstract and final. abstract means the method must be overridden, while final means it cannot be.
finally Java Keyword
The finally keyword is used
to define a block that is always executed in a try−catch−finally
statement.
A finally block typically
contains cleanup code that recovers from partial execution of a try block.
Examples
try
{
<block that may throw
exceptions>
}
catch
(<java.lang.Exception or subclass> e)
{
<code to handle exception
e>
}
finally
{
<statements that execute
with or without exception>
}
Remarks
The opening and closing
curly braces { and } are part of the syntax of the finally clause and may not be omitted even if the
clause contains a single statement.
Every try block must have
at least one catch or finally clause.
If any portion of the try
block is executed, the code in a finally block is always guaranteed to be executed whether an
exception occurs or not and independent of whether the try or catch blocks contain return, continue or
break statements.
In the absence of
exceptions, control flows through the try block and then into the finally
block.
If an exception occurs
during execution of the try block and the appropriate catch block contains a break, continue or return
statement, control flows through the finally block before the break, continue or return occurs.
float Java Keyword
float is a Java primitive
type.
A float variable may store
a single−precision floating point value.
Examples
float ratio = .01;
float diameter = 6.15;
float height = 1.35E03; //
1.35 * 103 or 1350.0
float height = 1e−2; // 1.0
* 10−2 or
0.01
Remarks
The following rules apply
to this keyword's use:
Floating point literals in
Java always default to double−precision. To specify a single−precision literal value, follow the number
with f or F, as in 0.01f.
Since floating point data
types are approximations of real numbers, you should generally never compare floating point
numbers for equality.
Java floating point numbers
can represent infinity and NaN (not a number). The Float wrapper
class defines the constants
MIN_VALUE, MAX_VALUE, NEGATIVE_INFINITY, POSITIVE_INFINITY and NaN.
for Java Keyword
The for keyword specifies a
loop whose condition is checked before each iteration.
Examples
int i;
for (i=0; i<max; i++)
{
<statements>
}
Remarks
The for statement takes the
form for(initialize; condition; increment)
The initialize statement
is executed once as the flow of control enters the for statement.
The condition is
evaluated before each execution of the body of the loop. The body of the loop
is executed if the condition
is true.
The increment statement
is executed after each execution of the body of the loop, before the condition is evaluated for the next
iteration.
if Java Keyword
The if keyword indicates
conditional execution of a block. The condition must evaluate to a boolean
value.
Examples
if (condition)
{
<statements>
}
if (condition)
{
<statements>
}
else
{
<statements>
}
Remarks
An if statement may have an
optional else clause containing code that is executed if the condition is false.
Expressions containing
boolean operands can contain only boolean operands.
implements Java
Keyword
The implements keyword is
used in a class declaration to indicate that the class being declared provides implementations for all
methods declared in the interface whose name follows the implements keyword.
Examples
public class Truck
implements IVehicle
{
}
Remarks
In the example above, the
Truck class must provide implementations for all methods declared in the IVehicle interface.
The Truck class is
otherwise independent; it may declare additional methods and variables and may extend another class.
A single class may
implement multiple interfaces.
import Java Keyword
The import keyword makes
one class or all classes in a package visible in the current Java source file.
Imported classes can be
referened without the use of fully−qualified class names.
Examples
import java.io.File;
import java.net.*;
Remarks
Many Java programmers use
only specific import statements (no '*') to avoid ambiguity when multiple packages contain
classes of the same name.
instanceof Java
Keyword
The instanceof keyword is
used to determine the class of an object.
Examples
if (node instanceof
TreeNode)
{
<statements>
}
Remarks
In the example above, if
node is an instance of the TreeNode class or is an instance of a subclass of TreeNode, the instanceof
expression evaluates to true.
int Java Keyword
int is a Java primitive
type.
A int variable may store a
32−bit integer value.
Examples
int number = 5;
int octalNumber = 0377;
int hexNumber = 0xff;
Remarks
The Integer class is a
wrapper class for the int primitive type. It defines MIN_VALUE and MAX_VALUE constants
representing the range of values for this type.
All integer literals in
Java are 32−bit int values unless the value is followed by l or L as in 235L, indicating the value should
be interpreted as a long.
interface Java
Keyword
The interface keyword is
used to declare a new Java interface, which is a collection of methods.
Interfaces are a powerful
feature of the Java language. Any class may declare that it implements one or
more interfaces, meaining it
implements all of the methods defined in those interfaces.
Examples
public interface IPolygon
{
public float getArea();
public int getNumberOfSides();
public int
getCircumference();
}
Remarks
Any class that implements
an interface must provide implementations for all methods in that interface.
A single class may
implement multiple interfaces.
long Java Keyword
long is a Java primitive
type.
A long variable may store a
64−bit signed integer.
Examples
long number = 5;
long anotherNumber = 34590L;
long octalNumber = 0377;
long hexNumber = 0xffl;
Remarks
The Long class is a wrapper
class for the long primitive type. It defines MIN_VALUE and MAX_VALUE constants
representing the range of values for this type.
All integer literals in
Java are 32−bit int values unless the value is followed by l or L as in 235L, indicating the value should
be interpreted as a long.
native Java Keyword
The native keyword may be
applied to a method to indicate that the method is implemented in a language other then Java.
Examples
native String
getProcessorType();
Remarks
Native methods are beyond
the scope of this documentation.
new Java Keyword
The new keyword is used to
create a new instance of a class.
Examples
String sName = new String();
Float fVal = new
Float(0.15);
Remarks
The argument following the
new keyword must be a class name followed by a series of constructor arguments in required
parentheses.
The collection of
arguments must match the signature of a constructor for the class.
The type of the variable on
the left side of the = must be assignment−compatible with the class or interface being
instantiated.
null Java Keyword
null is a Java reserved
word representing no value.
Examples
Integer i;
i = null;
String s;
if (s != null)
{
<statements>
}
Remarks
Assigning null to a
non−primitive variable has the effect of releasing the object to which the
variable previously referred.
null cannot be assigned to
variables of primitive types (byte, short, int, long, char, float, double, boolean)
package Java Keyword
The package keyword
specifies the Java package in which the classes declared in a Java source file
reside.
Examples
package com.mycompany;
public class MyClass
{
}
Remarks
The package statement, if
present, must be the first non−comment text in a Java source file.
In the example above, the
fully−qualified class name of the MyClass class is com.mycompany.MyClass.
If a Java source file does
not contain a package statement, the classes defined in the file are in the default package. Note that classes in the default package may not be
referenced from classes in non−default packages.
private Java Keyword
The private keyword is an access
control modifier that may be applied to a class, a method or a field (a variable declared in a
class).
Examples
public class MyPublicClass
{
private class MyPrivateClass
{
}
private int i;
private String myMethod()
{
<statements>
}
}
Remarks
A private (inner) class,
method or field may only be referenced from within the class in which it is declared. It is not visible
outside the class or to subclasses.
The default access for all
class members is package access, meaning that unless a specific access control modifier is present
the class members are accessible from within any class in the same package.
protected Java
Keyword
The protected keyword is an
access control modifier that may be applied to a class, a method or a
field (a variable declared in a
class).
Examples
public class MyPublicClass
{
protected class
MyPrivateClass
{
}
protected int i;
protected String myMethod()
{
<statements>
}
}
Remarks
A protected class, method
or field may be referenced from within the class in which it is declared, any other classes in the same
package, and any subclasses regardless of the package in which a subclass is declared.
The default access for all
class members is package access, meaning that unless a specific access control modifier is present
the class members are accessible from within any class in the same package.
public Java Keyword
The public keyword is an access
control modifier that may be applied to a class, a method or a field (a variable declared in a
class).
Examples
public class MyPublicClass
{
public class MyPrivateClass
{
}
public int i;
public String myMethod()
{
<statements>
}
}
Remarks
A public class, method or
field may only be referenced from any other class or package.
The default access for all
class members is package access, meaning that unless a specific access control modifier is present
the class members are accessible from within any class in the same package.
return Java Keyword
The return keyword causes a
method to return to the method that called it, passing a value that matches the return type of the
returning method.
Examples
public void myVoidMethod()
{
<statements>
return;
}
public String
myStringMethod()
{
String s = "my response";
return s;
}
public int myIntMethod()
{
int i = 5;
return(i);
}
Remarks
If the method has a
non−void return type, the return statement must have an argument of the same or a compatible type.
The parentheses surrounding
the return value are optional.
short Java Keyword
short is a Java primitive
type.
A short variable may store
a 16−bit signed integer.
Examples
short number = 5;
short octalNumber = 0077;
short hexNumber = 0xff;
Remarks
The Short class is a
wrapper class for the short primitive type. It defines MIN_VALUE and MAX_VALUE constants
representing the range of values for this type.
All integer literals in
Java are 32−bit int values unless the value is followed by l or L as in 235L, indicating the value should
be interpreted as a long.
static Java Keyword
The static keyword may be
applied to an inner class (a class defined within another class), method or
field (a member variable of a
class).
Examples
public class MyPublicClass
{
public final static int
MAX_OBJECTS = 100;
static int _numObjects = 0;
static class MyStaticClass
{
}
static int getNumObjects()
{
}
}
Remarks
In general, the static
keyword means that the entity to which it is applied is available outside any
particular instance of the class in
which the entity is declared.
A static (inner) class may
be instantiated and reference by other classes as though it were a top−level
class.
In the example above, code
in another class could instantiate the MyStaticClass class by qualifiying it's name with the containing
class name, as MyClass.MyStaticClass.
A static field (member
variable of a class) exists once across all instances of the class.
A static method may be
called from outside the class without first instantiating the class. Such a
reference always includes the class
name as a qualifier of the method call. In the example above code outside the MyClass class would invoke
the getNumObjects() static method as MyClass.getNumObjects().
The pattern:
public final static
<type> varName = <value>; is commonly used to declare
class constants that may be used from outside the class. A reference to such a constant is qualified with
the class name. In the example above, another class could reference the MAX_OBJECTS constant as
MyClass.MAX_OBJECTS.
super Java Keyword
The super keyword refers to
the superclass of the class in which the keyword is used.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
public MyClass(String arg)
{
super(arg);
}
public String
myStringMethod()
{
return
super.otherStringMethod();
}
Remarks
super as a standalone statement
represents a call to a constructor of the superclass.
super.<methodName>()
represents a call to a method of the superclass. This usage is only necessary when calling a method that
is overridden in this class in order to specify that the method should be called on the superclass.
switch Java Keyword
The switch statement is
used to select execution of one of multiple code blocks based on an expression.
Examples
int arg = <some
value>;
switch (arg)
{
case 1:
<statements>
break;
case 2:
<statements>
break;
default:
<statements>
break;
}
char arg = <some
value>;
switch (arg)
{
case 'y':
case 'Y':
<statements>
break;
case 'n':
case 'N':
<statements>
break;
default:
<statements>
break;
}
Remarks
The switch condition must
evaluate to a byte, char, short or int.
A case block does not have
an implicit ending point. A break statement is typically used at the end of each case block to exit the
switch statement.
Without a break statement,
the flow of execution will flow into all following case and/or default blocks.
synchronized Java
Keyword
The synchronized keyword
may be applied to a method or statement block and provides protection for critical sections that should only be executed by one thread at a time.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
public synchronized static
String mySyncStaticMethod()
{
}
public synchronized String
mySyncMethod()
{
}
{
public class MyOtherClass
{
Object someObj;
public String myMethod()
{
<statements>
synchronized (someObj)
{
<statements affecting
someObj>
}
}
}
Remarks
The synchronized keyword
prevents a critical section of code from being executed by more than one thread at a time.
When applied to a static
method, as with MySyncStaticMethod in the examples above, the entire class is locked while the method
is being executed by one thread at a time.
When applied to an instance
method, as with MySyncMethod in the examples above, the instance is locked while being accessed
by one thread at at time.
When applied to an object
or array, the object or array is locked while the associated code block is executed by one thread at
at time.
this Java Keyword
The this keyword refers to
the current instance.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
int number;
public MyClass(int number)
{
this.number = number;
}
}
Remarks
The this keyword is used to
refer to the current instance when a reference may be ambiguous.
In the example above, the
constructor argument number has the same name as a member variable of the class. this.number
means specifically the number member variable of this instance of MyClass.
throw Java Keyword
The throw keyword is used
to raise an exception.
Examples
import java.io.IOException;
public class MyClass
{
public method
readFile(String filename) throws IOException
{
<statements>
if (error)
{
throw new
IOException("error reading file");
}
}
}
Remarks
The throw statement takes a
java.lang.Throwable as an argument. The Throwable is propagated up the call stack until it is
caught by an appropriate catch block.
Any method that throws an
exception that is not a RuntimeException must also declare the exceptions it throws using a throws
modifier on the method declaration.
throws Java Keyword
The throws keyword may be
applied to a method to indicate the method raises particular types of
exceptions.
Examples
import java.io.IOException;
public class MyClass
{
public method
readFile(String filename) throws IOException
{
<statements>
if (error)
{
throw new
IOException("error reading file");
}
}
}
Remarks
The throws keyword takes a
comma−separated list of java.lang.Throwables as an argument.
Any method that throws an
exception that is not a RuntimeException must also declare the exceptions it throws using a throws
modifier on the method declaration.
The caller of a method with
a throws clause is required to enclose the method call in a try−catch block.
transient Java
Keyword
The transient keyword may
be applied to member variables of a class to indicate that the member variable should not be serialized
when the containing class instance is serialized.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
private transient String
password;
}
Remarks
None.
try Java Keyword
The try keyword is used to
enclose blocks of statements that might throw exceptions.
Examples
try
{
<block that may throw
exceptions>
}
catch
(<java.lang.Exception or subclass> e)
{
<code to handle exception
e>
}
try
{
<block that may throw
different exceptions>
}
catch (FooException e)
{
<code to handle
FooException e>
}
catch (BarException e)
{
<code to handle BarException
e>
}
try
{
<block that may throw
exceptions>
}
catch
(<java.lang.Exception or subclass> e)
{
<code to handle exception
e>
}
finally
{
<statements that execute
with or without exception>
}
Remarks
Every try block must have
at least one catch or finally clause.
If a particular exception
class is not handled by any catch clause, the exception propagates up the call stack to the next enclosing
try block, recursively. If an exception is not caught by any enclosing try block, the Java interpreter will exit with an error message and stack trace.
true Java Keyword
The true keyword represents
one of the two legal values for a boolean variable.
Examples
boolean isComplete = true;
Remarks
None.
void Java Keyword
The void keyword represents
a null type.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
public void doSomething();
{
<statements>
return;
}
}
Remarks
void may be used as the
return type of a method to indicate the method does not return a value.
volatile Java Keyword
The volatile keyword may be
used to indicate a member variable that may be modified asynchronously by more
than one thread.
Note: the volatile keyword
is not implemented in many Java Virtual Machines.
Examples
public class MyClass
{
volatile int sharedValue;
}
Remarks
volatile is intended to
guarantee that all threads see the same value of the specified variable.
None.
while Java Keyword
The while keyword specifies
a loop that is repeated as long as a condition is true.
Examples
while (!found)
{
<statements>
}
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