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Home/ Questions/Q 856759
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T08:17:15+00:00 2026-05-15T08:17:15+00:00

about a year ago I stumbled across a nice feature in Java that I

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about a year ago I stumbled across a nice feature in Java that I cannot for the life of me find again.

Through some magic interface it was apparently possible to declare some classes or functions replaceable during runtime.
I found a nice example guide of someone who ran a simple little program that printed a certain message, he then updated the program using a method I cannot remember anymore and all of a sudden the program had replaced that old print function with a new one.

I’ve tried looking through the Java API to spark my memory as well as googling but without success. Can anyone here help?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T08:17:16+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 8:17 am

    Various app containers can do this.

    Basically you’d need to reload the class in a new ClassLoader (unless you’re talking about doing this under the debugger, in which case there are completely different APIs available).

    In my opinion, this kind of thing is rarely worth the hassle: designing everything so that it can be reloaded is considerably harder than designing it so it can be completely restarted in a new process. It’s also easier to be sure exactly what code is running if there’s only ever one version loaded in the process.

    It’s a neat thing to be able to demo, but for most applications it’s not worth it. All in my opinion, of course 🙂

    Note that one notable exception is the ability to reload web UI layers without restarting the container: that can make life much easier.

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