欢迎您访问程序员文章站本站旨在为大家提供分享程序员计算机编程知识!
您现在的位置是: 首页

hashCode方法解释,重写equals,hashCode方法

程序员文章站 2024-03-22 17:55:22
...

hashcode方法返回该对象的哈希码值

  • 在应用程序的执行期间,对这同一个对象调用多次,hashCode方法都必须始终如一地返回同一个整数。在同一个应用程序的多次执行过程中,每次执行所返回的整数可以不一致。
  • 如果两个对象根据equal(Object)方法比较是相等的,那么调用这两个对象中任意一个对象的hashCode方法都必须返回同样的整数结果。
  • 如果两个对象根据equals(Object)方法比较是不相等的,那么调用这两个对象中任意一个对象的hashCode方法,则返回的整数结果可以相等也可以不等。但是程序员应该知道,给不相等的对象产生截然不同的整数结果,有可能提高散列表的性能。

哈希码产生的依据:哈希码并不是完全唯一的,它是一种算法,让同一个类的对象按照自己不同的特征尽量的有不同的哈希码,但不表示不同的对象哈希码完全不同。也有相同的情况,看程序员如何写哈希码的算法。

再归纳一下就是hashCode是用于查询使用的,而equals是用于比较两个对象是否相等的。

Object的hashCode()返回的不是对象的内存地址。

 

        System.out.println("1".hashCode() + "," + "1".hashCode() + "," + "2".hashCode());
        System.out.println("1" == "1");
        System.out.println("1".hashCode() == "1".hashCode());
        System.out.println("1".equals("1"));

49,49,50
true
true
true

(jdk1.8)Object:

  简单的翻译一下就是,hashCode方法一般的规定是:

1.在 Java 应用程序执行期间,在对同一对象多次调用 hashCode 方法时,必须一致地返回相同的整数,前提是将对象进行 equals 比较时所用的信息没有被修改。从某一应用程序的一次执行到同一应用程序的另一次执行,该整数无需保持一致。    
2.如果根据 equals(Object) 方法,两个对象是相等的,那么对这两个对象中的每个对象调用 hashCode 方法都必须生成相同的整数结果。--为啥重写equals后也要重写hashCode?--当equals返回true时,保证hashCode返回的两个整数结果也相等!!    
3.如果根据 equals(java.lang.Object) 方法,两个对象不相等,那么对这两个对象中的任一对象上调用 hashCode 方法不 要求一定生成不同的整数结果。但是,程序员应该意识到,为不相等的对象生成不同整数结果可以提高哈希表的性能。

原文:https://blog.csdn.net/u013679744/article/details/57074669 


    /**
     * Returns a hash code value for the object. This method is
     * supported for the benefit of hash tables such as those provided by
     * {@link java.util.HashMap}.
     * <p>
     * The general contract of {@code hashCode} is:
     * <ul>
     * <li>Whenever it is invoked on the same object more than once during
     *     an execution of a Java application, the {@code hashCode} method
     *     must consistently return the same integer, provided no information
     *     used in {@code equals} comparisons on the object is modified.
     *     This integer need not remain consistent from one execution of an
     *     application to another execution of the same application.
     * <li>If two objects are equal according to the {@code equals(Object)}
     *     method, then calling the {@code hashCode} method on each of
     *     the two objects must produce the same integer result.
     * <li>It is <em>not</em> required that if two objects are unequal
     *     according to the {@link java.lang.Object#equals(java.lang.Object)}
     *     method, then calling the {@code hashCode} method on each of the
     *     two objects must produce distinct integer results.  However, the
     *     programmer should be aware that producing distinct integer results
     *     for unequal objects may improve the performance of hash tables.
     * </ul>
     * <p>
     * As much as is reasonably practical, the hashCode method defined by
     * class {@code Object} does return distinct integers for distinct
     * objects. (This is typically implemented by converting the internal
     * address of the object into an integer, but this implementation
     * technique is not required by the
     * Java&trade; programming language.)
     *
     * @return  a hash code value for this object.
     * @see     java.lang.Object#equals(java.lang.Object)
     * @see     java.lang.System#identityHashCode
     */
    public native int hashCode();

    /**
     * Indicates whether some other object is "equal to" this one.
     * <p>
     * The {@code equals} method implements an equivalence relation
     * on non-null object references:
     * <ul>
     * <li>It is <i>reflexive</i>: for any non-null reference value
     *     {@code x}, {@code x.equals(x)} should return
     *     {@code true}.
     * <li>It is <i>symmetric</i>: for any non-null reference values
     *     {@code x} and {@code y}, {@code x.equals(y)}
     *     should return {@code true} if and only if
     *     {@code y.equals(x)} returns {@code true}.
     * <li>It is <i>transitive</i>: for any non-null reference values
     *     {@code x}, {@code y}, and {@code z}, if
     *     {@code x.equals(y)} returns {@code true} and
     *     {@code y.equals(z)} returns {@code true}, then
     *     {@code x.equals(z)} should return {@code true}.
     * <li>It is <i>consistent</i>: for any non-null reference values
     *     {@code x} and {@code y}, multiple invocations of
     *     {@code x.equals(y)} consistently return {@code true}
     *     or consistently return {@code false}, provided no
     *     information used in {@code equals} comparisons on the
     *     objects is modified.
     * <li>For any non-null reference value {@code x},
     *     {@code x.equals(null)} should return {@code false}.
     * </ul>
     * <p>
     * The {@code equals} method for class {@code Object} implements
     * the most discriminating possible equivalence relation on objects;
     * that is, for any non-null reference values {@code x} and
     * {@code y}, this method returns {@code true} if and only
     * if {@code x} and {@code y} refer to the same object
     * ({@code x == y} has the value {@code true}).
     * <p>
     * Note that it is generally necessary to override the {@code hashCode}
     * method whenever this method is overridden, so as to maintain the
     * general contract for the {@code hashCode} method, which states
     * that equal objects must have equal hash codes.
     *
     * @param   obj   the reference object with which to compare.
     * @return  {@code true} if this object is the same as the obj
     *          argument; {@code false} otherwise.
     * @see     #hashCode()
     * @see     java.util.HashMap
     */
    public boolean equals(Object obj) {
        return (this == obj);
    }

(jdk1.8)String【重写了hashCode方法和equals方法】:

    /**
     * Returns a hash code for this string. The hash code for a
     * {@code String} object is computed as
     * <blockquote><pre>
     * s[0]*31^(n-1) + s[1]*31^(n-2) + ... + s[n-1]
     * </pre></blockquote>
     * using {@code int} arithmetic, where {@code s[i]} is the
     * <i>i</i>th character of the string, {@code n} is the length of
     * the string, and {@code ^} indicates exponentiation.
     * (The hash value of the empty string is zero.)
     *
     * @return  a hash code value for this object.
     */
    public int hashCode() {
        int h = hash;
        if (h == 0 && value.length > 0) {
            char val[] = value;

            for (int i = 0; i < value.length; i++) {
                h = 31 * h + val[i];
            }
            hash = h;
        }
        return h;
    }
    /**
     * Compares this string to the specified object.  The result is {@code
     * true} if and only if the argument is not {@code null} and is a {@code
     * String} object that represents the same sequence of characters as this
     * object.
     *
     * @param  anObject
     *         The object to compare this {@code String} against
     *
     * @return  {@code true} if the given object represents a {@code String}
     *          equivalent to this string, {@code false} otherwise
     *
     * @see  #compareTo(String)
     * @see  #equalsIgnoreCase(String)
     */
    public boolean equals(Object anObject) {
        if (this == anObject) {
            return true;
        }
        if (anObject instanceof String) {
            String anotherString = (String)anObject;
            int n = value.length;
            if (n == anotherString.value.length) {
                char v1[] = value;
                char v2[] = anotherString.value;
                int i = 0;
                while (n-- != 0) {
                    if (v1[i] != v2[i])
                        return false;
                    i++;
                }
                return true;
            }
        }
        return false;
    }

end