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Home/ Questions/Q 8461685
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 10, 20262026-06-10T13:56:40+00:00 2026-06-10T13:56:40+00:00

I have this class : public class Stack { private class Node { String

  • 0

I have this class :

public class Stack {

   private class Node {
       String item;
       Node next;
   }
   // some other methods here

}

In my book, the author says that the size per stack Node is 40 bytes including:

16 bytes (object overhead)
8 bytes (inner class extra overhead)
8 bytes (references to string)
8 bytes (references to node)
----------------------------------------------
40 bytes per stack node

I understand that the last two things refer to the size of the references to the String and Node. But I don’t know what the object overhead and inner class extra overhead correspond to. Can you please explain?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-10T13:56:41+00:00Added an answer on June 10, 2026 at 1:56 pm

    object overhead

    Every object has a header which is typically 8-12 bytes long. Each object is also 8 byte aligned and a simple estimate is you say its about 16 bytes long.

    inner class extra overhead

    As your inner class is not static, it has a reference to the outer class.

    If this were an anonymous inner class you might have copies of any number of final variables (any used in the anonymous class code)

    8 bytes (inner class extra overhead)
    8 bytes (references to string)
    8 bytes (references to node)

    Most JVMs use 32-bit references so the size would be 4 bytes. Even 64-bit JVM with a heap up to 32 GB can use 32-bit references.

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