November 27, 2007

Published November 27, 2007 by

Differences Between Java Terms


Abstract Class
Concrete Class
1. An abstract class cannot be used to instantiate objects.
1. Concrete class can be used to instantiate objects.
2. An abstract class may have one or more subclasses but never an instance
2. Concrete class may have subclasses and instances.
3. Typically an abstract class has one ore more abstract methods.
3. A concrete class doesn’t have any abstract method.
Applets
Servlets
1. Applets are Java programs that can be embedded in HTML documents.
1. Servlets are Java programs that generate content for web pages.
2. Applets run on Java enabled web browsers.
2. Servlets run on Java enabled web servers.
3. Java applets tend to be small programs and are often used to add visual or multimedia effects to web pages.
3. Servlets generate HTML documents that are sent to the client browsers for display. For example, servlets can be used to process an HTML form submitted by a web client and to generate a response page.
Array
Vector
1. An array can contain only one type of data.
1. A Vector can contain references of any type of objects.
2. An array has a fixed size.
2. Size of the Vector can change as needed.
Class Variable (static variable)
Instance Variable (non-static variable)
1. Only one copy of a class variable is shared by all objects of a class
1. Every object has its own copy of all the instance variable of the class
2. A class variable represents class wide information (same to all objects).
2. An instance variable represents information of only one object.
3. A class variable can be accessed through a reference to any object of the class or by qualifying the variable name with the class name and a dot (.).
3. An instance variable can only be accessed through a reference to any object of the class
4. A class variable exists even when no object of the class exists- it is available as soon as the class is loaded into memory at execution time.
4. An instance variable exists only when an object of the class exists.
5. A class variable can be accessed from both the static and non-static context.
5. An instance variable can only be accessed from the non-static context.
Reference: H.M. Deitel and P.J. Deitel (2005) Java How to Program
Primitive Types
Reference Types
1. Primitive types are the fundamental, built in (as keyword) types
1. Reference types are constructed from primitive types either through class definition, interface definition or the use of arrays.
2. A variable of any primitive type contains a single value of the appropriate size and format.
2. A variable of a reference type holds a null reference or a reference to an instance of a class
3. Values of these types cannot be decomposed
3. A reference type can be decomposed into several values.
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