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Home/ Questions/Q 851533
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T07:26:32+00:00 2026-05-15T07:26:32+00:00

I’m profiling some old java code and it appears that my caching of values

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I’m profiling some old java code and it appears that my caching of values using a static HashMap and a access method does not work.

Caching code (a bit abstracted):

static HashMap<Key, Value> cache = new HashMap<Key, Value>();

public static Value getValue(Key key){
    System.out.println("cache size="+ cache.size());                
    if (cache.containsKey(key)) {
        System.out.println("cache hit");
        return cache.get(key);
    } else {
        System.out.println("no cache hit");
        Value value = calcValue();
        cache.put(key, value);
        return value;
    }
}

Profiling code:

for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++)
{ 
    getValue(new Key());
}

Result output:

 cache size=0
 no cache hit
 (..)
 cache size=99
 no cache hit

It looked like a standard error in Key‘s hashing code or equals code.
However:

 new Key().hashcode == new Key().hashcode // TRUE
 new Key().equals(new Key()) // TRUE

What’s especially weird is that cache.put(key, value) just adds another value to the hashmap, instead of replacing the current one.

So, I don’t really get what’s going on here. Am I doing something wrong?

edit
Ok, I see that in the real code the Key gets used in other methods and changes, which therefore get’s reflected in the hashCode of the object in the HashMap. Could that be the cause of this behaviour, that it goes missing?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T07:26:33+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:26 am

    On a proper @Override of equals/hashCode

    I’m not convinced that you @Override (you are using the annotation, right?) hashCode/equals properly. If you didn’t use @Override, you may have defined int hashcode(), or boolean equals(Key), neither of which would do what is required.


    On key mutation

    If you are mutating the keys of the map, then yes, trouble will ensue. From the documentation:

    Note: great care must be exercised if mutable objects are used as map keys. The behavior of a map is not specified if the value of an object is changed in a manner that affects equals comparisons while the object is a key in the map.

    Here’s an example:

    Map<List<Integer>,String> map =
        new HashMap<List<Integer>,String>();
    List<Integer> theOneKey = new ArrayList<Integer>();
    map.put(theOneKey, "theOneValue");
    
    System.out.println(map.containsKey(theOneKey)); // prints "true"
    theOneKey.add(42);
    System.out.println(map.containsKey(theOneKey)); // prints "false"
    

    By the way, prefer interfaces to implementation classes in type declarations. Here’s a quote from Effective Java 2nd Edition: Item 52: Refer objects by their interfaces

    […] you should favor the use of interfaces rather than classes to refer to objects. If appropriate interface types exist, then parameters, return values, variables, and fields should all be declared using interface types.

    In this case, if at all possible, you should declare cache as simply a Map instead of a HashMap.

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