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Home/ Questions/Q 566069
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:56:20+00:00 2026-05-13T12:56:20+00:00

I’m from a C++ background and just started Java today. Say I have a

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I’m from a C++ background and just started Java today. Say I have a class with a couple of data members. For example:

public class Person {
    //Constructors/Destructor
    public Person(String strFirstName, String strLastName) {
        m_strFirstName = strFirstName;
        m_strLastName = strLastName;
        m_strFullName = m_strFirstName + m_strLastName;
    }

    //Getters
    public String GetFullName() { return m_strFullName; }
    public String GetFirstName() { return m_strFirstName; }
    public String GetLastName() { return m_strLastName; }

    //Private Data Members
    private String m_strFirstName;
    private String m_strLastName;
    private String m_strFullName;
}

Now lets say I do this:

Person john = new Person("john", "doe");
Person johndoe = new Person("john", "doe");
if (john == johndoe) {
    System.out.println("They are Equal");
} else {
    System.out.println("They are NOT Equal");
}

Here the result is “They are NOT Equal”. I understand this is because Java is comparing the references (memory addresses), and since they are different locations in memory the test fails. I have read that Java doesn’t support operator overloading, so I can’t overload the operator==, so is there a method I’d override to implement my memberwise comparison? The object.equals method looked promising, but I’ve read that it’s bad practice ot override this one.

UPDATE:
Ok I’m convinced overriding equals is OK! I can’t find that article that said that it’s bad. Thanks for the help, I’ll probably have more questions as I learn Java!!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:56:20+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:56 pm

    You do:

    if (john.equals(johndoe)) {
      ...
    }
    

    and implement the equals() method on your object:

    public class Person {
      private String firstName;
      private String lastName;
      private String fullName;
    
      public Person(String firstName, String lastName) {
        this.firstName = firstName;
        this.lastName = lastName;
        this.fullName = firstName + lastName;
      }
    
      public String getFirstName() { return firstName; }
      public String getLastName() { return lastName; }
      public String getFullName() { return fullName; }
    
      @Override
      public boolean equals(Object ob) {
        if (ob == null) return false;
        if (ob.getClass() != getClass()) return false;
        Person other = (Person)ob;
        if (!firstName.equals(other.firstName)) return false;
        if (!lastName.equals(other.lastName)) return false;
        if (!(fullName.equals(other.fullName)) return false;
        return true;
      }
    
      @Override
      public int hashCode() {
        return firstName.hashCode() ^ lastName.hashCode() ^ fullName.hashCode();
      }
    }
    

    Two things to note:

    1. The above is more Java-style than C++-style. I’d highly suggest you adopt Java coding conventions when coding Java. If you’re new to Java, you should try and learn them; and
    2. Java has an equals/hashCode contract meaning that if two objects are equal then their hash codes must be equal.
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