Thursday, July 12, 2007

Core Java FAQ'S

1. what is a transient variable?
A transient variable is a variable that may not be serialized.

2.which containers use a border Layout as their default layout?
The window, Frame and Dialog classes use a border layout as their default layout.

3.Why do threads block on I/O?
Threads block on i/o (that is enters the waiting state) so that other threads may execute while the i/o Operation is performed.

4. How are Observer and Observable used?
Objects that subclass the Observable class maintain a list of observers. When an
Observable object is updated it invokes the update() method of each of its observers to notify the observers that it has changed state. The Observer interface is implemented by objects that observe Observable objects.

5. What is synchronization and why is it important?
With respect to multithreading, synchronization is the capability to control the access of multiple threads to shared resources. Without synchronization, it is possible for one thread to modify a shared object while another thread is in the process of using or updating that object's value. This often leads to significant
errors.

6. Can a lock be acquired on a class?
Yes, a lock can be acquired on a class. This lock is acquired on the class's Class object.

7. What's new with the stop(), suspend() and resume() methods in JDK 1.2?
The stop(), suspend() and resume() methods have been deprecated in JDK 1.2.

8. Is null a keyword?
The null value is not a keyword.

9. What is the preferred size of a component?
The preferred size of a component is the minimum component size that will allow the component to display normally.

10. What method is used to specify a container's layout?
The setLayout() method is used to specify a container's layout.

11. Which containers use a FlowLayout as their default layout?
The Panel and Applet classes use the FlowLayout as their default layout.

12. What state does a thread enter when it terminates its processing?
When a thread terminates its processing, it enters the dead state.

13. What is the Collections API?
The Collections API is a set of classes and interfaces that support operations on
collections of objects.

14. Which characters may be used as the second character of an identifier, but not
as the first character of an identifier?
The digits 0 through 9 may not be used as the first character of an identifier but they may be used after the first character of an identifier.

15. What is the List interface?
The List interface provides support for ordered collections of objects.

16. How does Java handle integer overflows and underflows?
It uses those low order bytes of the result that can fit into the size of the type allowed by the operation.

17. What is the Vector class?
The Vector class provides the capability to implement a growable array of objects

18. What modifiers may be used with an inner class that is a member of an outer
class?
A (non-local) inner class may be declared as public, protected, private, static, final, or abstract.

19. What is an Iterator interface?
The Iterator interface is used to step through the elements of a Collection.

20. What is the difference between the >> and >>> operators?
The >> operator carries the sign bit when shifting right. The >>> zero-fills bits that have been shifted out.

21. Which method of the Component class is used to set the position and size of a
component?
setBounds()

22. How many bits are used to represent Unicode, ASCII, UTF-16, and UTF-8
characters?
Unicode requires 16 bits and ASCII require 7 bits. Although the ASCII character set uses only 7 bits, it is usually represented as 8 bits. UTF-8 represents characters using 8, 16, and 18 bit patterns.UTF-16 uses 16-bit and larger bit patterns.

23What is the difference between yielding and sleeping?
When a task invokes its yield() method, it returns to the ready state. When a task invokes its sleep() method, it returns to the waiting state.

24. Which java.util classes and interfaces support event handling?
The EventObject class and the EventListener interface support event processing.

25. Is sizeof a keyword?
The sizeof operator is not a keyword.

26. What are wrapped classes?
Wrapped classes are classes that allow primitive types to be accessed as objects.

27. Does garbage collection guarantee that a program will not run out of memory?
Garbage collection does not guarantee that a program will not run out of memory. It is possible for programs to use up memory resources faster than they are garbage collected. It is also possible for programs to create objects that are not subject to garbage collection

28. What restrictions are placed on the location of a package statement within a
source code file?
A package statement must appear as the first line in a source code file (excluding blank lines and comments).

29. Can an object's finalize() method be invoked while it is reachable?
An object's finalize() method cannot be invoked by the garbage collector while the object is still reachable.
However, an object's finalize() method may be invoked by other objects.

30. What is the immediate superclass of the Applet class?
Panel

31. What is the difference between preemptive scheduling and time slicing?
Under preemptive scheduling, the highest priority task executes until it enters the waiting or dead states or a higher priority task comes into existence. Under time slicing, a task executes for a predefined slice of time and then reenters the pool of ready tasks. The scheduler then determines which task should execute
next, based on priority and other factors.

32. Name three Component subclasses that support painting.
The Canvas, Frame, Panel, and Applet classes support painting.

33. What value does readLine() return when it has reached the end of a file?
The readLine() method returns null when it has reached the end of a file.

34. What is the immediate superclass of the Dialog class?
Window

35. What is clipping?
Clipping is the process of confining paint operations to a limited area or shape.

36. What is a native method?
A native method is a method that is implemented in a language other than Java.

37. Can a for statement loop indefinitely?
Yes, a for statement can loop indefinitely. For example, consider the following:
for(;;) ;

38. What are order of precedence and associativity, and how are they used?
Order of precedence determines the order in which operators are evaluated in
expressions. Associatity determines whether an expression is evaluated left-to-right or right-to-left

39. When a thread blocks on I/O, what state does it enter?
A thread enters the waiting state when it blocks on I/O.

40. To what value is a variable of the String type automatically initialized?
The default value of an String type is null.

41. What is the catch or declare rule for method declarations?
If a checked exception may be thrown within the body of a method, the method must
either catch the exception or declare it in its throws clause.

42. What is the difference between a MenuItem and a CheckboxMenuItem?
The CheckboxMenuItem class extends the MenuItem class to support a menu item that may be checked or unchecked.

43. What is a task's priority and how is it used in scheduling?
A task's priority is an integer value that identifies the relative order in which it should be executed with respect to other tasks. The scheduler attempts to schedule higher priority tasks before lower priority tasks.

44. What class is the top of the AWT event hierarchy?
The java.awt.AWTEvent class is the highest-level class in the AWT event-class
hierarchy.

45. When a thread is created and started, what is its initial state?
A thread is in the ready state after it has been created and started.

46. Can an anonymous class be declared as implementing an interface and
extending a class?
An anonymous class may implement an interface or extend a superclass, but may not be declared to do both.

47. What is the range of the short type?
The range of the short type is -(2^15) to 2^15 - 1.

48. What is the range of the char type?
The range of the char type is 0 to 2^16 - 1.

49. In which package are most of the AWT events that support the event-delegation
model defined?
Most of the AWT-related events of the event-delegation model are defined in the
java.awt.event package.
The AWTEvent class is defined in the java.awt package.

50. What is the immediate superclass of Menu?
MenuItem

51. What is the purpose of finalization?
The purpose of finalization is to give an unreachable object the opportunity to perform any cleanup processing before the object is garbage collected.

52. Which class is the immediate superclass of the MenuComponent class.
Object

53. What invokes a thread's run() method?
After a thread is started, via its start() method or that of the Thread class, the JVM
invokes the thread's run() method when the thread is initially executed.

54. What is the difference between the Boolean & operator and the && operator?
If an expression involving the Boolean & operator is evaluated, both operands are
evaluated. Then the & operator is applied to the operand. When an expression involving the && operator is evaluated, the first operand is evaluated. If the first operand returns a value of true then the second operand is evaluated. The
&& operator is then applied to the first and second operands. If the first operand
evaluates to false, the evaluation of the second operand is skipped.

55. Name three subclasses of the Component class.
Box.Filler, Button, Canvas, Checkbox, Choice, Container, Label, List, Scrollbar, or
TextComponent

56. What is the GregorianCalendar class?
The GregorianCalendar provides support for traditional Western calendars.

57. Which Container method is used to cause a container to be laid out and
redisplayed?
validate()

58. What is the purpose of the Runtime class?
The purpose of the Runtime class is to provide access to the Java runtime system.

59. How many times may an object's finalize() method be invoked by the garbage
collector?
An object's finalize() method may only be invoked once by the garbage collector.

60. What is the purpose of the finally clause of a try-catch-finally statement?
The finally clause is used to provide the capability to execute code no matter whether or not an exception is thrown or caught.

61. What is the argument type of a program's main() method?
A program's main() method takes an argument of the String[] type.

62. Which Java operator is right associative?
The = operator is right associative.

63. What is the Locale class?
The Locale class is used to tailor program output to the conventions of a particular
geographic, political, or cultural region.

64. Can a double value be cast to a byte?
Yes, a double value can be cast to a byte.

65. What is the difference between a break statement and a continue statement?
A break statement results in the termination of the statement to which it applies (switch, for, do, or while). A continue statement is used to end the current loop iteration and return control to the loop statement.

66. What must a class do to implement an interface?
It must provide all of the methods in the interface and identify the interface in its
implements clause.

67. What method is invoked to cause an object to begin executing as a separate
thread?
The start() method of the Thread class is invoked to cause an object to begin executing as a separate thread.

68. Name two subclasses of the TextComponent class.
TextField and TextArea

69. What is the advantage of the event-delegation model over the earlier eventinheritance model?
The event-delegation model has two advantages over the event-inheritance model. First, it enables event handling to be handled by objects other than the ones that generate the events (or their containers). This allows a clean separation between a component's design and its use. The other advantage of the eventdelegation
model is that it performs much better in applications where many events are
generated. This performance improvement is due to the fact that the event-delegation model does not have to repeatedly process unhandled events, as is the case of the event-inheritance model.

70. Which containers may have a MenuBar?
Frame

71. How are commas used in the initialization and iteration parts of a for statement?
Commas are used to separate multiple statements within the initialization and iteration parts of a for statement.

72. What is the purpose of the wait(), notify(), and notifyAll() methods?
The wait(),notify(), and notifyAll() methods are used to provide an efficient way for
threads to wait for a shared resource. When a thread executes an object's wait() method, it enters the waiting state. It only enters the ready state after another thread invokes the object's notify() or notifyAll() methods.

73. What is an abstract method?
An abstract method is a method whose implementation is deferred to a subclass.

74. How are Java source code files named?
A Java source code file takes the name of a public class or interface that is defined within the file. A source code file may contain at most one public class or interface. If a public class or interface is defined within a source code file, then the source code file must take the name of the public class or interface. If no public class or interface is defined within a source code file, then the file must take on a name that is different than its classes and interfaces. Source code files use the .java extension.

75. What is the relationship between the Canvas class and the Graphics class?
A Canvas object provides access to a Graphics object via its paint() method.

76. What are the high-level thread states?
The high-level thread states are ready, running, waiting, and dead.

77. What value does read() return when it has reached the end of a file?
The read() method returns -1 when it has reached the end of a file.

78. Can a Byte object be cast to a double value?
No, an object cannot be cast to a primitive value.

79. What is the difference between a static and a non-static inner class?
A non-static inner class may have object instances that are associated with instances of the class's outer class. A static inner class does not have any object instances.

80. What is the difference between the String and StringBuffer classes?
String objects are constants. StringBuffer objects are not.

81. If a variable is declared as private, where may the variable be accessed?
A private variable may only be accessed within the class in which it is declared.

82. What is an object's lock and which object's have locks?
An object's lock is a mechanism that is used by multiple threads to obtain synchronized access to the object. A thread may execute a synchronized method of an object only after it has acquired the object's lock. All objects and classes have locks. A class's lock is acquired on the class's Class object.

83. What is the Dictionary class?
The Dictionary class provides the capability to store key-value pairs.

84. How are the elements of a BorderLayout organized?
The elements of a BorderLayout are organized at the borders (North, South, East, and West) and the center of a container.

85. What is the % operator?
It is referred to as the modulo or remainder operator. It returns the remainder of dividing the first operand by the second operand.

86. When can an object reference be cast to an interface reference?
An object reference be cast to an interface reference when the object implements the referenced interface.

87. What is the difference between a Window and a Frame?
The Frame class extends Window to define a main application window that can have a menu bar.

88. Which class is extended by all other classes?
The Object class is extended by all other classes.

89. Can an object be garbage collected while it is still reachable?
A reachable object cannot be garbage collected. Only unreachable objects may be
garbage collected..

90. Is the ternary operator written x : y ? z or x ? y : z ?
It is written x ? y : z.

91. What is the difference between the Font and FontMetrics classes?
The FontMetrics class is used to define implementation-specific properties, such as
ascent and descent, of a Font object.

92. How is rounding performed under integer division?
The fractional part of the result is truncated. This is known as rounding toward zero.

93. What happens when a thread cannot acquire a lock on an object?
If a thread attempts to execute a synchronized method or synchronized statement and is unable to acquire an object's lock, it enters the waiting state until the lock becomes available.

94. What is the difference between the Reader/Writer class hierarchy and the
InputStream/OutputStream class hierarchy?
The Reader/Writer class hierarchy is character-oriented, and the
InputStream/OutputStream class hierarchy is byte-oriented.

95. What classes of exceptions may be caught by a catch clause?
A catch clause can catch any exception that may be assigned to the Throwable type. This includes the Error and Exception types.

96. If a class is declared without any access modifiers, where may the class be
accessed?
A class that is declared without any access modifiers is said to have package access. This means that the class can only be accessed by other classes and interfaces that are defined within the same package.

97. What is the SimpleTimeZone class?
The SimpleTimeZone class provides support for a Gregorian calendar.

98. What is the Map interface?
The Map interface replaces the JDK 1.1 Dictionary class and is used associate keys with values.

99. Does a class inherit the constructors of its superclass?
A class does not inherit constructors from any of its superclasses.

100. For which statements does it make sense to use a label?
The only statements for which it makes sense to use a label are those statements that can enclose a break or continue statement.

101. What is the purpose of the System class?
The purpose of the System class is to provide access to system resources.

102. Which TextComponent method is used to set a TextComponent to the readonly state?
setEditable()

103. How are the elements of a CardLayout organized?
The elements of a CardLayout are stacked, one on top of the other, like a deck of cards.

104. Is &&= a valid Java operator?
No, it is not.

105. Name the eight primitive Java types.
The eight primitive types are byte, char, short, int, long, float, double, and boolean.

106. Which class should you use to obtain design information about an object?
The Class class is used to obtain information about an object's design.

107. What is the relationship between clipping and repainting?
When a window is repainted by the AWT painting thread, it sets the clipping regions to the area of the window that requires repainting.

108. Is "abc" a primitive value?
The String literal "abc" is not a primitive value. It is a String object.

109. What is the relationship between an event-listener interface and an eventadapter class?
An event-listener interface defines the methods that must be implemented by an event handler for a particular kind of event. An event adapter provides a default implementation of an eventlistener interface.

110. What restrictions are placed on the values of each case of a switch statement?
During compilation, the values of each case of a switch statement must evaluate to a value that can be promoted to an int value.

111. What modifiers may be used with an interface declaration?
An interface may be declared as public or abstract.

112. Is a class a subclass of itself?
A class is a subclass of itself.

113. What is the highest-level event class of the event-delegation model?
The java.util.EventObject class is the highest-level class in the event-delegation class hierarchy.

114. What event results from the clicking of a button?
The ActionEvent event is generated as the result of the clicking of a button.

115. How can a GUI component handle its own events?
A component can handle its own events by implementing the required event-listener
interface and adding itself as its own event listener.

116. What is the difference between a while statement and a do statement?
A while statement checks at the beginning of a loop to see whether the next loop iteration should occur. A do statement checks at the end of a loop to see whether the next iteration of a loop should occur. The do statement will always execute the body of a loop at least once.

117. How are the elements of a GridBagLayout organized?
The elements of a GridBagLayout are organized according to a grid. However, the
elements are of different sizes and may occupy more than one row or column of the grid. In addition, the rows and columns may have different sizes.

118. What advantage do Java's layout managers provide over traditional windowing
systems?
Java uses layout managers to lay out components in a consistent manner across all
windowing platforms. Since Java's layout managers aren't tied to absolute sizing and positioning, they are able to accomodate platform-specific differences among windowing systems.

119. What is the Collection interface?
The Collection interface provides support for the implementation of a mathematical bag -an unordered collection of objects that may contain duplicates.

120. What modifiers can be used with a local inner class?
A local inner class may be final or abstract.

121. What is the difference between static and non-static variables?
A static variable is associated with the class as a whole rather than with specific instances of a class. Nonstatic variables take on unique values with each object instance.

122. What is the difference between the paint() and repaint() methods?
The paint() method supports painting via a Graphics object. The repaint() method is used to cause paint() to be invoked by the AWT painting thread.

123. What is the purpose of the File class?
The File class is used to create objects that provide access to the files and directories of a local file system.

124. Can an exception be rethrown?
Yes, an exception can be rethrown.

125. Which Math method is used to calculate the absolute value of a number?
The abs() method is used to calculate absolute values.

126. How does multithreading take place on a computer with a single CPU?
The operating system's task scheduler allocates execution time to multiple tasks. By
quickly switching between executing tasks, it creates the impression that tasks execute sequentially.

127. When does the compiler supply a default constructor for a class?
The compiler supplies a default constructor for a class if no other constructors are
provided.

128. When is the finally clause of a try-catch-finally statement executed?
The finally clause of the try-catch-finally statement is always executed unless the thread of execution terminates or an exception occurs within the execution of the finally clause.

129. Which class is the immediate superclass of the Container class?
Component

130. If a method is declared as protected, where may the method be accessed?
A protected method may only be accessed by classes or interfaces of the same package or by subclasses of the class in which it is declared.

131. How can the Checkbox class be used to create a radio button?
By associating Checkbox objects with a CheckboxGroup.

132. Which non-Unicode letter characters may be used as the first character of an
identifier?
The non-Unicode letter characters $ and _ may appear as the first character of an
identifier

133. What restrictions are placed on method overloading?
Two methods may not have the same name and argument list but different return types.

134. What happens when you invoke a thread's interrupt method while it is
sleeping or waiting?
When a task's interrupt() method is executed, the task enters the ready state. The next time the task enters the running state, an InterruptedException is thrown.

135. What is casting?
There are two types of casting, casting between primitive numeric types and casting
between object references. Casting between numeric types is used to convert larger values, such as double values, to smaller values, such as byte values. Casting between object references is used to refer to an object by a compatible class, interface, or array type reference.

136. What is the return type of a program's main() method?
A program's main() method has a void return type.

137. Name four Container classes.
Window, Frame, Dialog, FileDialog, Panel, Applet, or ScrollPane

138. What is the difference between a Choice and a List?
A Choice is displayed in a compact form that requires you to pull it down to see the list of available choices. Only one item may be selected from a Choice. A List may be displayed in such a way that several List items are visible. A List supports the selection of one or more List items.

139. What class of exceptions are generated by the Java run-time system?
The Java runtime system generates RuntimeException and Error exceptions.

140. What class allows you to read objects directly from a stream?
The ObjectInputStream class supports the reading of objects from input streams.

141. What is the difference between a field variable and a local variable?
A field variable is a variable that is declared as a member of a class. A local variable is a variable that is declared local to a method.

142. Under what conditions is an object's finalize() method invoked by the garbage
collector?
The garbage collector invokes an object's finalize() method when it detects that the object has become unreachable.

143. How are this() and super() used with constructors?
this() is used to invoke a constructor of the same class. super() is used to invoke a
superclass constructor.

144. What is the relationship between a method's throws clause and the exceptions
that can be thrown during the method's execution?
A method's throws clause must declare any checked exceptions that are not caught within the body of the method.

145. What is the difference between the JDK 1.02 event model and the eventdelegation model introduced with JDK 1.1?
The JDK 1.02 event model uses an event inheritance or bubbling approach. In this model, components are required to handle their own events. If they do not handle a particular event, the event is inherited by (or bubbled up to) the component's ontainer. The container then either handles the event or it is bubbled up to
its container and so on, until the highest-level container has been tried.
In the event-delegation model, specific objects are designated as event handlers for GUI components. These objects implement event-listener interfaces. The event-delegation model is more efficient than the event-inheritance model because it eliminates the processing required to support the bubbling of unhandled events.

146. How is it possible for two String objects with identical values not to be equal
under the == operator?
The == operator compares two objects to determine if they are the same object in
memory. It is possible for two String objects to have the same value, but located indifferent areas of memory.

147. Why are the methods of the Math class static?
So they can be invoked as if they are a mathematical code library.

148. What Checkbox method allows you to tell if a Checkbox is checked?
getState()

149. What state is a thread in when it is executing?
An executing thread is in the running state.

150. What are the legal operands of the instanceof operator?
The left operand is an object reference or null value and the right operand is a class,
interface, or array type.

151. How are the elements of a GridLayout organized?
The elements of a GridBad layout are of equal size and are laid out using the squares of a grid.

152. What an I/O filter?
An I/O filter is an object that reads from one stream and writes to another, usually
altering the data in some way as it is passed from one stream to another.

153. If an object is garbage collected, can it become reachable again?
Once an object is garbage collected, it ceases to exist. It can no longer become reachable again.

154. What is the Set interface?
The Set interface provides methods for accessing the elements of a finite mathematical set. Sets do not allow duplicate elements.

155. What classes of exceptions may be thrown by a throw statement?
A throw statement may throw any expression that may be assigned to the Throwable type.

156. What are E and PI?
E is the base of the natural logarithm and PI is mathematical value pi.

157. Are true and false keywords?
The values true and false are not keywords.

158. What is a void return type?
A void return type indicates that a method does not return a value.

159. What is the purpose of the enableEvents() method?
The enableEvents() method is used to enable an event for a particular object. Normally, an event is enabled when a listener is added to an object for a particular event. The enableEvents() method is used by objects that handle events by overriding their event-dispatch methods.

160. What is the difference between the File and RandomAccessFile classes?
The File class encapsulates the files and directories of the local file system. The
RandomAccessFile class provides the methods needed to directly access data contained in any part of a file.

161. What happens when you add a double value to a String?
The result is a String object.

162. What is your platform's default character encoding?
If you are running Java on English Windows platforms, it is probably Cp1252. If you are running Java on English Solaris platforms, it is most likely 8859_1..

163. Which package is always imported by default?
The java.lang package is always imported by default.

164. What interface must an object implement before it can be written to a stream
as an object?
An object must implement the Serializable or Externalizable interface before it can be written to a stream as an object.

165. How are this and super used?
this is used to refer to the current object instance. super is used to refer to the variables and methods of the superclass of the current object instance.

166. What is the purpose of garbage collection?
The purpose of garbage collection is to identify and discard objects that are no longer needed by a program so that their resources may be reclaimed and reused.

167. What is a compilation unit?
A compilation unit is a Java source code file.

168. What interface is extended by AWT event listeners?
All AWT event listeners extend the java.util.EventListener interface.

169. What restrictions are placed on method overriding?
Overridden methods must have the same name, argument list, and return type. The
overriding method may not limit the access of the method it overrides. The overriding method may not throw any exceptions that may not be thrown by the overridden method.

170. How can a dead thread be restarted?
A dead thread cannot be restarted.

171. What happens if an exception is not caught?
An uncaught exception results in the uncaughtException() method of the thread's
ThreadGroup being invoked, which eventually results in the termination of the program in which it is thrown.

172. What is a layout manager?
A layout manager is an object that is used to organize components in a container.

173. Which arithmetic operations can result in the throwing of an
ArithmeticException?
Integer / and % can result in the throwing of an ArithmeticException.

174. What are three ways in which a thread can enter the waiting state?
A thread can enter the waiting state by invoking its sleep() method, by blocking on I/O, by unsuccessfully attempting to acquire an object's lock, or by invoking an object's wait() method. It can also enter the waiting state by invoking its (deprecated) suspend() method.

175. Can an abstract class be final?
An abstract class may not be declared as final.

176. What is the ResourceBundle class?
The ResourceBundle class is used to store locale-specific resources that can be loaded by a program to tailor the program's appearance to the particular locale in which it is being run.

177. What happens if a try-catch-finally statement does not have a catch clause to
handle an exception that is thrown within the body of the try statement?
The exception propagates up to the next higher level try-catch statement (if any) or
results in the program's termination.

178. What is numeric promotion?
Numeric promotion is the conversion of a smaller numeric type to a larger numeric type, so that integer and floating-point operations may take place. In numerical promotion, byte, char, and short values are converted to int values. The int values are also converted to long values, if necessary. The long and float values are converted to double values, as required.

179. What is the difference between a Scrollbar and a ScrollPane?
A Scrollbar is a Component, but not a Container. A ScrollPane is a Container. A
ScrollPane handles its own events and performs its own scrolling.

180. What is the difference between a public and a non-public class?
A public class may be accessed outside of its package. A non-public class may not be accessed outside of its package.

181. To what value is a variable of the boolean type automatically initialized?
The default value of the boolean type is false.

182. Can try statements be nested?
Try statements may be tested.

183. What is the difference between the prefix and postfix forms of the ++ operator?
The prefix form performs the increment operation and returns the value of the increment operation. The postfix form returns the current value all of the expression and then performs the increment operation on that value.

184. What is the purpose of a statement block?
A statement block is used to organize a sequence of statements as a single statement group.

185. What is a Java package and how is it used?
A Java package is a naming context for classes and interfaces. A package is used to create a separate name space for groups of classes and interfaces. Packages are also used to organize related classes and interfaces into a single API unit and to control accessibility to these classes and interfaces.

186. What modifiers may be used with a top-level class?
A top-level class may be public, abstract, or final.

187. What are the Object and Class classes used for?
The Object class is the highest-level class in the Java class hierarchy. The Class class is used to represent the classes and interfaces that are loaded by a Java program.

188. How does a try statement determine which catch clause should be used to
handle an exception?
When an exception is thrown within the body of a try statement, the catch clauses of the try statement are examined in the order in which they appear. The first catch clause that is capable of handling the exception is executed. The remaining catch clauses are ignored.

189. Can an unreachable object become reachable again?
An unreachable object may become reachable again. This can happen when the object's finalize() method is invoked and the object performs an operation which causes it to become accessible to reachable objects.

190. When is an object subject to garbage collection?
An object is subject to garbage collection when it becomes unreachable to the program in which it is used.

191. What method must be implemented by all threads?
All tasks must implement the run() method, whether they are a subclass of Thread or
implement the Runnable interface.

192. What methods are used to get and set the text label displayed by a Button
object?
getLabel() and setLabel()

193. Which Component subclass is used for drawing and painting?
Canvas

194. What are synchronized methods and synchronized statements?
Synchronized methods are methods that are used to control access to an object. A thread only executes a synchronized method after it has acquired the lock for the method's object or class. Synchronized statements are similar to synchronized methods. A synchronized statement can only be executed after a thread has acquired the lock for the object or class referenced in the synchronized
statement.

195. What are the two basic ways in which classes that can be run as threads may be defined?
A thread class may be declared as a subclass of Thread, or it may implement the
Runnable interface.

196. What are the problems faced by Java programmers who don't use layout
managers?
Without layout managers, Java programmers are faced with determining how their GUI will be displayed across multiple windowing systems and finding a common sizing and positioning that will work within the constraints imposed by each windowing system.

197. What is the difference between an if statement and a switch statement?
The if statement is used to select among two alternatives. It uses a boolean expression to decide which alternative should be executed. The switch statement is used to select among multiple alternatives. It uses an int expression to determine which alternative should be executed.

198. What is the List interface?
The List interface provides support for ordered collections of objects.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

All Improtant FAQ'S in Java & J2EE

Java:-
1)What is static variable.
2)What is transient variable.
3)What is final variable.
4)What is final method.
5)What is native method.
6)What is abstract method
7)What is innerclass.
8)What is static class.
9)What is final class.
10)What is anonymous class.
11)What is casting.
12)What are wrapper classes.
13)What is Singleton class.
14)What is JVM.
15)What is JNI.
16)What is JAR file.
17)What is garbage collection.
18)What is Socket. How will you create a connection.
19)What is ServerSocket. How will you create a connection.
20)What is DatagramSocket.How will you create a connection.
21)What is Synchronisation in threads.
22)What is Collection.
23)What is JavaMail.
24)What is Serialization and Deserialization.
25)What is the life cycle of an applet.
26)What is Reflection. Uses of Reflection.
27)What is the purpose of finalisation.
28)What is the functionality of try, catch and finally blocks (*)
29)What is the difference between Abstract class and Interface. (*)
30)What is the difference between overloading and overriding.
31)What is the difference between Hashmap and Hashtable. (*)
32)What is the difference between Vector, Array and Arraylist. (*)
33)What is the difference between final, finally and finalized. (*)
34)What is the difference between String and StringBuffer. (*)
35)What is the difference between exception and error.
36)What is the difference between List, Set and Map. (*)
37)What is the difference between Observable and Observer.
38)What is the difference between Eventlistener and Eventadapter.
39)What is the difference between Classpath and Import.
40)What is the difference between Iterator and Enumeration.
41)What is the difference between Comparable and Comparator.
42)What is the difference between applet and application.
43)What is the difference between applet and swing.
44)What is the difference between HashMap and TreeMap. (*)
45)What is the difference between wait(), join(), sleep(), notify() & notifyall()
methods. (*)
46)What is the difference between Reader/Writer classes.
47)What is the difference between InputStream/Outputstream classes.
48)What is the difference between File and RandomFileAccess classes.
49)What is the difference between paint() and repaint() methods.
50)What is the difference between yielding and sleeping.
51)What is the difference between preemptive scheduling and time slicing.
52)What is the difference between static and non-static variables.
53)What is the difference between Delegation event model and Inheritance event
model.
54)What are the various access modifiers in Java. Differences between them. (*)
55)What are the various ways of creating a thread. What is difference between
them. (*)
56)What are the various Collection classes available. (*)
57)What are the various layouts available. What is the difference between them.
58)Which Collection class is used for FIFO in Java.
59)Which Collection class is used for LIFO in Java.
60)When should i used notify() and notifyall() methods on threads.
61)Can the abstract class be final.
62)What is the command to know which version of java you are using.
63)Can we add Hashtable/HashMap to a vector.
64)How do you handle events in Java.
65)What is class loader.
66)What is the difference between function synchronization and object
synchronization.
67)What is the difference between .equals and ==

JDBC:

1)What is a transaction. (*)
2)What is the purpose of setAutoCommit(). (*)
3)What are the three statements in JDBC & differences between them. (*)
4)What is stored procedure. How do you create stored procedure. (*)
5)What are batch updates.
6)What is the difference between Resultset and Rowset.
7)What are the steps for connecting to the database using JDBC. (*)
8)What is Connection Pooling. (*)
9)How do you implement Connection Pooling. (*)
10)What Class.forName() method will do.
11)What is the difference between JDBC 1.0 and JDBC 2.0

JSP:

1)What is JSP. (*)
2)What are advantages of JSP.
3)What is the difference between include directive & jsp:include action. (*)
4)What are Custom tags. Why do you need Custom tags. How do you create Custom
tag. (*)
5)What are the implicit objects in JSP & differences between them. (*)
6)What is jsp:usebean. What are the scope attributes & difference betw. these
attributes.(*)
7)What is difference between scriptlet and expression.
8)What is Declaration.
9)How do you connect to the database from JSP.
10)How do you call stored procedures from JSP.
11)How do you restrict page errors display in the JSP page.
12)How do you pass control from one JSP page to another.

Servlets:

1)What are Servlets.
2)What are the advantages of Servlet.
3)What is the Life cycle of Servlet. (*)
4)What is the difference between Servlet and JSP. (*)
5)What is the difference between doGet() and doPost() methods. (*)
6)What is Session Tracking. (*)
7)What are the various ways for achieving SessionTracking in Servlets. How do you
implement.
8)What is Requestdispatcher. (*)
9)What is the difference between include() and forward() methods. (*)
10)What is the difference betw. sendRedirect() & forward() method. (*)
11)What is filter. Why do we need filter.
12)What is HTTPSessionBindingListener and what are the methods available in it.
13)What is ServletContext.
14)How do you pass values from Servlet to a JSP. (*)
15)How do you pass values from HTML page to Servlet.
16)How do you pass control from one Servlet to other Servlet/JSP. (*)
17)What is the difference between Servlet and CGI.
18)How do you implement SingleThreadModel in Servlets.
19)What is the difference between HTTPServlet and GenericServlet.
20)How can i access a configuration or log.properties file(stored under WEB-INF) in a
web application.

EJB:- (All questions are important)

1)What is the difference between normal Java object and EJB.
2)What is the difference between JavaBean and EJB.
3)What is EJB.
4)What is Session Bean. What are the various types of Session Bean.
5)What is the difference between Stateful session bean and Stateless session bean.
6)What is the life cycle of Stateful session bean.
7)What is the life cycle of Stateless session bean.
8)What are the call back methods in Session bean.
9)When you will chose Stateful session bean and Stateless session bean.
10)What is Entity Bean. What are the various types of Entity Bean.
11)What is the difference between CMP and BMP.
12)What is the lifecycle of Entity Bean.
13)What are the call back methods in Entity bean.
14)When you will chose CMP and BMP.
15)What are advantages and disadvantages of CMP and BMP.
16)What is difference between EJB 1.1 and EJB 2.0
17)What is Message Driven Bean.
18)What is the life cycle of MDB.
19)What is local interface. How values will be passed.
20)What is the difference between local interface and remote interface.
21)What is EJB Query Language.
22)What is ACID.
23)What are the various isolation levels in a transaction and differences between
them.
24)What are the various transaction attributes and differences between them.
25)What is the difference between activation and passivation.
26)What is Instance pooling.
27)What is EJB architecture(components).
28)What is the difference between HTTPSession and Stateful Session Bean.
29)How do you check whether the session is active in Stateful session bean.
30)What is the difference between find and select methods in EJB.
31)What are the optional clauses in EJB QL.
32)What is handle in EJB.
33)What is the difference between JNDI context, Initial context, session context and
ejb context.
34)What is the difference between sessioncontext and entitycontext.
35)What is the difference between EAR, JAR and WAR file.
36)What is deployment descriptor.
37)What is CMR.
38)What is the difference between CMP 1.1 and CMP 2.0
39)What is the difference between optimistic locking and pessimistic locking.
40)What is lazy loading.
41)What are the services provided by container.
42)How will you propagate exception thrown inside session bean to JSP or Servlet
client.
43)If session has thrown ApplicaitonException would you use
EJBContext.setRollBackOnly method.
44)Is Decorator an EJB design pattern.
45)Why are ejbActivate() and ejb Passivate() included for stateless sessiob bean
even though they are never required as it is nonconversational bean.
46)If i throw a custom ApplicationException from a business method in Entity bean
which is participating in a transaction, would the transaction be rolled back by
container. Does container rolls back transaction only in case of SystemExceptions.
47)Can i map more than one table in a CMP.
48)How can i retrieve from inside my Bean(Stateless session and Entity CMP) the
user name which i am serving (the user name of user just logged in my web
application).
49)What are simple rules that a Primary key class has to follow.
50)How is Stateful Session bean maintain their states with client.
51)Is it possible to invoke multiple Session beans from one Session bean using
Reflection.
52)With EJB 1.1 specs, why is unsetSessionContext() not provided in Session Beans,
like unsetEntityContext() in Entity Beans.
53)What is the difference between ejbStore() and ejbLoad().
54)If my session bean with single method insert record into 2 entity beans, how can
know that the process is done in same transaction (the attributes for these beans are
Required).
55)Is there a way to get the original exception object from inside a nested or
wrapped Exception (for example an EJBException or RemoteException).
56)Is it possible to share an HttpSession between a JSP and EJB. What happens
when I change a value in the HttpSession from inside an EJB.
57)What is clustering. What are the different algorithms used for clustering.
58)How to implement an entity bean which the PrimaryKey is an autonumeric.
59)How many EJB Objects are created for a Bean.
60)What is abstract schema.
61)What is the difference between ejbCreate() and ejbPostCreate().
62)What is re-entrant. Is session beans reentrant. Is entity beans reentrant.
63)Why does EJB needs two interfaces(Home and Remote Interface).
64)Is stateless Sessiob bean create() method contains any parameters.
65)Can I develop an Entity Bean without implementing the create() method in the
home interface.
66)Why an onMessage call in Message-driven bean is always a seperate transaction.
67)Does Stateful Session bean support instance pooling.
68)Can I invoke Runtime.gc() in an EJB.
69)Can a Session Bean be defined without ejbCreate() method.

XML:-

1)What is the difference between SAX parser and DOM parser. (*)
2)What is the difference between Schema and DTD. (*)
3)How do you parse/validate the XML document. (*)
4)What is XML Namespace.
5)What is Xpath.
6)What is XML template.
7)How would you produce PDF output using XSL's.
8)What are the steps to transform XML into HTML using XSL.
9)What is XSL.
10)What is XSLT.

JMS:-

1)What is JMS.
2)What is the difference between queue and topic. (*)
3)What is the difference between Point to Point and Publish/Subscribe Messaging
Domains. (*)
4)What is Producer, Consumer.
5)What is the difference between Message producer and Message consumer.

Struts:- (All questions are important)

1)What is Struts.
2)What is the difference between Struts 1.0 and Struts 1.1
3)Explain Struts navigation flow.
4)What is the difference between ActionForm and DynaActionForm.
5)What is DispatchAction.
6)How to call ejb from Struts.
7)What are the various Struts tag libraries.
8)What is the difference between ActionErrors and ActionMessages.
9)How you will handle errors and exceptions using Struts.
10)How you will save the data across diff. pages for a particular client request using
Struts.
11)What we will define in Struts-config.xml file. And explain their purpose.
12)What is the purpose of tiles-def.xml file, resourcebundle.properties file,
validation.xml file.
13)What is Action Class. What are the methods in Action class.
14)Explain about token feature in Struts.

Websphere and Weblogic:- (All questions are important)

1)What are the steps for deploying servlets and EJB's in Weblogic.
2)What are the steps for deploying servlets and EJB's in Websphere.
3)What is Hot Deployment in Weblogic.
4)How do you implement connection pooling in Websphere.
5)How do you implement connection pooling in Weblogic.

Oracle:-

1)What is the stored procedure. How do you create stored procedure. (*)
2)What is difference between Outerjoin and Innerjoin. (*)
3)What is bind variable. What is the use of it.(*)
4)What are triggers.
5)What is the difference between function and procedure. (*)
6)What is database schema. How do you create schema. (*)
7)What is cursor.
8)What is package.

J2EE:-

1)What is J2EE.
2)What are the tiers in J2EE architecture. (*)
3)What are the modules in a J2EE application. (*)
4)What are the different XML files used in J2EE.

Design Patterns:-

1)What is Design pattern.
2)What is Singleton pattern. Example. (*)
3)What is Value Object pattern. (*)
4)What is MVC. (*)
5)What is Session facade pattern. (*)
6)What is Business delegate apttern.
7)What is Data access object pattern.
8)What is decorator pattern.
9)What is Factory pattern. (*)
10)What is Service Locator pattern.

OOAD:

1)What is polymorphism. (*)
2)What is inheritance. (*)
3)What is encapsulation.
4)What is abstraction.
UML and Rational Rose:
1)What is UML. (*)
2)What is difference between aggregation and composition. (*)
3)What is association. (*)
4)What is generalization.
5)What are the various UML diagrams.
6)What is the difference between class diagram & sequence diagram. (*)
7)How do you differentiate(in terms of symbolic representation) public, private and
protected variables in UML diagram. (*)

RUP:

1)What is RUP. (*)
2)What is a Usecase.
3)What are the various phases in RUP. Explain each phase. (*)

XP:

1)What is XP.
2)What is the difference between XP and RUP.

Java Improtant Tip's

  1. An identifier in java must begin with a letter , a dollar sign($), or an underscore (-); subsequent characters may be letters, dollar signs, underscores, or digits.

  2. There are three top-level elements that may appear in a file. None of these elements is required. If they are present, then they must appear in the following order:
    -package declaration
    -import statements
    -class definitions

  3. A java source file (.java file) can't have more than one public class , interface or combination of both.
  4. "goto" is a keyword in Java.

  5. NULL is not a keyword, but null is a keyword in Java.
  6. A final class can't be subclassed.

  7. A final method can't be overridden but a non final method can be overridden to final method.

  8. Abstract classes can't be instantiated and should be subclassed.

  9. Primitive Wrapper classes are immutable.
  10. A static method can't refer to "this" or "super".

  11. A static method can't be overridden to non-static and vice versa.

  12. The variables in java can have the same name as method or class.
  13. All the static variables are initialized when the class is loaded.
  14. An interface can extend more than one interface, while a class can extend only one class.
  15. The variables in an interface are implicitly final and static. If the interface , itself, is declared as public the methods and variables are implicitly public.

  16. Variables cannot be synchronized.

  17. Instance variables of a class are automatically initialized, but local variables of a function need to be initialized explicitly.
  18. An abstract method cannot be static because the static methods can't be overridden.

  19. The lifecycle methods of an Applet are init(), start(), stop() and destroy().

  20. The transient keyword is applicable to variables only.

  21. The native keyword is applicable to methods only.

  22. The final keyword is applicable to methods , variables and classes.

  23. The abstract keyword is applicable to methods and classes.

  24. The static keyword is applicable to variables, methods or a block of code called static initializes.

  25. A native method can't be abstract but it can throw exception(s).

  26. A final class cannot have abstract methods.

  27. A class can't be both abstract and final.

  28. A transient variable may not be serialized.

  29. All methods of a final class are automatically final.

  30. While casting one class to another subclass to superclass is allowed without any type casting.
    e.g.. A extends B , B b = new A(); is valid but not the reverse.

  31. The String class in java is immutable. Once an instance is created, the string it contains cannot be changed.
    e.g. String s1 = new String("test"); s1.concat("test1"); Even after calling concat() method on s1, the value of s1 will remain to be "test". What actually happens is a new instance is created.
    But the StringBuffer class is mutable.

  32. The + and += operators are the only cases of operator overloading in java and is applicable to Strings.

  33. Bit-wise operators - &, ^ and | operate on numeric and boolean operands.
  34. The short circuit logical operators && and || provide logical AND and OR operations on boolean types and unlike & and | , these are not applicable to integral types. The valuable additional feature provided by these operators is the right operand is not evaluated if the result of the operation can be determined after evaluating only the left operand.

  35. The difference between x = ++y; and x = y++;
    In the first case y will be incremented first and then assigned to x. In second case first y will be assigned to x then it will be incremented.

  36. Please make sure you know the difference between << , >> and >>>(unsigned rightshift) operators.

  37. The initialization values for different data types in java is as follows
    byte = 0, int = 0, short = 0, char = '\u0000', long = 0L, float = 0.0f, double = 0.0d, boolean = false,
    object referenece (of any object) = null.

  38. Setting the object reference to null makes it a candidate for garbage collection.

  39. An overriding method may not throw a checked exception unless the overridden method also throws that exception or a superclass of that exception.

  40. Interface methods can't be native, static, synchronized, final, private, protected or abstract.

  41. Abstract classes can have constructors , and it can be called by super() when its subclassed.

  42. A final variable is a constant and a static variable is like a global variable.

  43. The String class is a final class, it can't be subclassed.

  44. The Math class has a private constructor, it can't be instantiated.

  45. The random() method of Math class in java returns a random number , a double , between 0.0 and 1.0.

  46. The java.lang.Throwable class has two subclasses : Exception and Error.

  47. An Error indicates serious problems that a reasonable application should not try to catch. Most such errors are abnormal conditions.

  48. The two kinds of exceptions in java are : Compile time (Checked ) and Run time (Unchecked) exceptions. All subclasses of Exception except the RunTimeException and its subclasses are checked exceptions.
    Examples of Checked exception : IOException, ClassNotFoundException.
    Examples of Runtime exception :ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException,NullPointerException, ClassCastException, ArithmeticException, NumberFormatException.

  49. The unchecked exceptions do not have to be caught.

  50. A try block may not be followed by a catch but in that case, finally block must follow try.

  51. While using multiple catch blocks, the type of exception caught must progress from the most specific exception to catch to the superclass(es) of these exceptions.

  52. More than one exception can be listed in the throws clause of a method using commas. e.g. public void myMethod() throws IOException, ArithmeticException.

  53. On dividing an integer by 0 in java will throw ArithmeticException.

  54. The various methods of Java.lang.Object are
    clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString and wait.

  55. The Java.lang.System is a final class and can't be subclassed.

  56. Garbage collection in java cannot be forced. The methods used to call garbage collection thread are System.gc() and Runtime.gc()

  57. To perform some task when an object is about to be garbage collected, you can override the finalize() method of the Object class. The JVM only invokes finalize() method once per object. The signature of finalize() method of Object class is : protected void finalize() throws Throwable.

  58. The parent classes of input and output streams : InputStream and OutputStream class are abstract classes.

  59. File class can't be used to create a new file. For that any other output stream class such as FileOutputStream or filter streams like PrintWriter should be used. Please note that java will create a file only when the file is not available.

  60. For the RandomAccessFile constructor, the mode argument must either be equal to "r" or "rw".
  61. In java, console input is accomplished by reading from System.in .
  62. System.in is an object of type InputStream; System.out and System.err are objects of type PrintStream.
  63. Both FileInputStream and FileOutputStream classes throws FileNotFoundException. In earlier versions of java, FileOutputStream() threw an IOException when an output could not be created.
  64. System.in is an object of type InputStream; System.out and System.err are objects of type PrintStream.
  65. A method can't be overridden to be more private. e.g.. a public method can only be overridden to be public.

  66. Both primitives and object references can be cast.

  67. If inner class is declared in a method then it can access only final variables of the particular method but can access all variables of the enclosing class.

  68. To refer to a field or method in the outer class instance from within the inner class, use Outer.this.fieldname .
  69. Inner classes may not declare static initializers or static members unless they are compile time constants i.e. static final var = value;
  70. A nested class cannot have the same name as any of its enclosing classes.
  71. Inner class may be private, protected, final, abstract or static.

  72. An example of creation of instance of an inner class from some other class:
    class Outer
    {
    public class Inner{}
    }

    class Another
    {
    public void amethod()
    {
    Outer.Inner i = new Outer().new Inner();
    }
    }

  73. Classes defined in methods can be anonymous, in which case they must be instantiated at the same point they are defined. These classes can't have explicit constructor and may implement interface or extend other classes.

  74. The Thread class resides in java.lang package and need not be imported.

  75. The sleep and yield methods of Thread class are static methods.

  76. The range of Thread priority in java is 1-10. The minimum priority is 1 and the maximum is 10. The default priority of any thread in java is 5.

  77. There are two ways to provide the behavior of a thread in java: extending the Thread class or implementing the Runnable interface.

  78. The only method of Runnable interface is "public void run();".

  79. New thread take on the priority of the thread that spawned it.

  80. Using the synchronized keyword in the method declaration, requires a thread obtain the lock for this object before it can execute the method.
  81. A synchronized method can be overridden to be not synchronized and vice versa.
  82. In java terminology, a monitor is any object that has some synchronized code.

  83. Both wait() and notify() methods must be called in synchronized code.

  84. The notify() mthod moves one thread, that is waiting on this object's monitor, into the Ready state. This could be any of the waiting threads.
  85. The notifyAll() method moves all threads, waiting on this object's monitor into the Ready state.
  86. Every object has a lock and at any moment that lock is controlled by, at most, one single thread.

  87. There are two ways to mark code as synchronized:
    a.) Synchronize an entire method by putting the synchronized modifier in the method's declaration.
    b.) Synchronize a subset of a method by surrounding the desired lines of code with curly brackets ({}).

  88. The argument to switch can be either byte, short , char or int.

  89. The expression for an if and while statement in java must be a boolean.

  90. Breaking to a label (using break ;) means that the loop at the label will be terminated and any outer loop will keep iterating. While a continue to a label (using continue ;) continues execution with the next iteration of the labeled loop.

  91. A static method can only call static variables or other static methods, without using the instance of the class. e.g. main() method can't directly access any non static method or variable, but using the instance of the class it can.

  92. instanceof is a java keyword not instanceOf.

  93. The if() statement in java takes only boolean as an argument. Please note that if (a=true){}, provided a is of type boolean is a valid statement and the code inside the if block will be executed.

  94. The (-0.0 == 0.0) will return true, while (5.0==-5.0) will return false.

  95. An abstract class may not have even a single abstract method but if a class has an abstract method it has to be declared as abstract.

  96. Collection is an Interface where as Collections is a helper class.

  97. The default Layout Manager for Panel and Applet is Flow. For Frame and Window its BorderLayout.

  98. The FlowLayout always honors the a component's preferred size.

  99. BorderLayout honors the preferred width of components on the East and West, while the preferred height is honored for the components in the North and South.
  100. The java.awt.event package provides seven adapter classes, one for each listener interface. All these adapter classes have do-nothing methods (empty bodies) , implementing listener interface.

  101. A componenet subclass may handle its own events by calling enableEvents(), passing in an even mask.
  102. The Listener interfaces inherit directly from java.util.EventListener interface.

  103. A Container in java is a Component (Container extends Component) that can contain other components.

  104. Graphics class is abstract, hence cannot be instantiated.
  105. The repaint() method invokes a component's update() method() which in turn invokes paint() method.

  106. The Applet class extends Panel, Frame class extends Window.

  107. A String in java is initialized to null, not empty string and an empty string is not same as a null string.

  108. The statement float f = 5.0; will give compilation error as default type for floating values is double and double can't be directly assigned to float without casting.

  109. The equals() method in String class compares the values of two Strings while == compares the memory address of the objects being compared.
    e.g. String s = new String("test"); String s1 = new String("test");
    s.equals(s1) will return true while s==s1 will return false.

  110. The valueOf() method converts data from its internal format into a human-readable form. It is a static method that is overloaded within String class for all of Java's built-in types, so that each type can be converted properly into a string.
  111. The main difference between Vector and ArrayList is that Vector is synchronized while the ArrayList is not.
  112. A Set is a collection, which cannot contain any duplicate elements and has no explicit order to its elements.
  113. A List is a collection, which can contain duplicate elements, and the elements are ordered.
  114. A Map does not implement the Collection interface.
  115. The following definition of main method is valid : static public void main(String[] args).

  116. The main() method can be declared final.

  117. The example of array declaration along with initialization - int k[] = new int[]{1,2,3,4,9};

  118. The size of an array is given by arrayname.length.
  119. The local variables (variables declared inside method) are not initialized by default. But the array elements are always initialized wherever they are defined be it class level or method level.

  120. In an array , the first element is at index 0 and the last at length-1. Please note that length is a special array variable and not a method.

  121. The octal number in java is preceded by 0 while the hexadecimal by 0x (x may be in small case or upper case)
    e.g.
    octal :022
    hexadecimal :0x12

  122. A constructor cannot be native, abstract, static, synchronized or final.

  123. Constructors are not inherited so not possible to override them.

  124. A constructor body can include a return statement providing no value is returned .
  125. A constructor never return a value. If you specify a return value, the JVM (java virtual machine) will interpret it as a method.

  126. A call to this() or super() in a constructor must be placed at the first line.

  127. If a class contains no constructor declarations, then a default constructor that takes no arguments is supplied. This default constructor invokes the no-argument constructor of the super class via super() call (if there is any super class).

  128. Be careful for static and abstract key word in the program.

  129. Also be careful for private keyword in front of a class.

  130. The UTF characters in java are as big as they need to be while Unicode characters are all 16 bits.