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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:14:52+00:00 2026-05-13T06:14:52+00:00

Is it possible to return in a static method a class? I will explain…

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Is it possible to return in a static method a class? I will explain…

I have:

public class A { public static void blah(){} }
public class B { }

I want to create a static method in B witch returns A. So you can do:

A.blah();

And

B.getA().blah();

This, without creating an instance of A. Just use it static methods.

Is this possible?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:14:52+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:14 am

    This is a rebuttal of @irreputable’s answer:

    public class B { 
        public static A getA(){ return null; }
    }
    
    B.getA().blah(); //works!
    

    It “works”, but probably not in the sense that you expect, and certainly not in a useful way. Let’s break this down into two parts:

    A a = B.getA();
    a.blah();
    

    The first statement is returning a (null in this case) instance of A, and the second statement is ignoring that instance and calling A.blah(). So, these statements are actually equivalent to

    B.getA();
    A.blah();
    

    or (given that getA() is side-effect free), just plain

    A.blah();
    

    And here’s an example which illustrates this more clearly:

    public class A {
       public static void blah() { System.err.println("I'm an A"); }
    }
    
    public class SubA extends A {
       public static void blah() { System.err.println("I'm a SubA"); }
    }
    
    public class B { 
       public static A getA(){ return new SubA(); }
    }
    
    B.getA().blah(); //prints "I'm an A".
    

    … and this (I hope) illustrates why this approach doesn’t solve the OP’s problem.

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