Declaring and Creating Objects

In Java, you have to declare new objects and then create them with the new operator. For example, here's how I create an object of the Java String class, passing the text "Welcome to Java" to that class's constructor:

public class ch10_12 
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        String greeting1;
					greeting1 = new String("Welcome to Java");
    .
    .
    .

Note that I first declared the greeting1 object, giving the object's class, String, as its type. Then I create the object with the new operator.

Overloaded Constructors

Classes can have different constructors that handle different types of data. For example, I passed a string to the String class's constructor in the previous example, but I can also pass an array of characters ...

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