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Java (programming language)

Java is a high-level, class-based, object-oriented programming language that is designed to have as few implementation dependencies as possible. It is a general-purpose programming language intended to let programmers write once, run anywhere (WORA),[17] meaning that compiled Java code can run on all platforms that support Java without the need to recompile.[18] Java applications are typically compiled to bytecode that can run on any Java virtual machine (JVM) regardless of the underlying computer architecture. The syntax of Java is similar to C and C++, but has fewer low-level facilities than either of them. The Java runtime provides dynamic capabilities (such as reflection and runtime code modification) that are typically not available in traditional compiled languages. As of 2019, Java was one of the most popular programming languages in use according to GitHub,[citation not found][19][20] particularly for client–server web applications, with a reported 9 million developers.[21]

Java
ParadigmMulti-paradigm: generic, object-oriented (class-based), functional, imperative, reflective, concurrent
Designed byJames Gosling
DeveloperSun Microsystems
First appearedMay 23, 1995; 27 years ago (1995-05-23)[1]
Stable release
Java SE 19[2]  / 20 September 2022; 6 months ago (20 September 2022)
Typing disciplineStatic, strong, safe, nominative, manifest
Filename extensions.java, .class, .jar, .jmod
Websiteoracle.com/java/, java.com, dev.java
Influenced by
CLU,[3] Simula67,[3] Lisp,[3] Smalltalk,[3] Ada 83, C++,[4] C#,[5] Eiffel,[6] Mesa,[7] Modula-3,[8] Oberon,[9] Objective-C,[10] UCSD Pascal,[11][12] Object Pascal[13]
Influenced
Ada 2005, BeanShell, C#, Chapel,[14] Clojure, ECMAScript, Fantom, Gambas,[15] Groovy, Hack,[16] Haxe, J#, Kotlin, PHP, Python, Scala, Seed7, Vala, JavaScript, JS++
  • Java Programming at Wikibooks

Java was originally developed by James Gosling at Sun Microsystems. It was released in May 1995 as a core component of Sun Microsystems' Java platform. The original and reference implementation Java compilers, virtual machines, and class libraries were originally released by Sun under proprietary licenses. As of May 2007, in compliance with the specifications of the Java Community Process, Sun had relicensed most of its Java technologies under the GPL-2.0-only license. Oracle offers its own HotSpot Java Virtual Machine, however the official reference implementation is the OpenJDK JVM which is free open-source software and used by most developers and is the default JVM for almost all Linux distributions.

As of September 2022, Java 19 is the latest version, while Java 17, 11 and 8 are the current long-term support (LTS) versions.

History

 
Duke, the Java mascot
 
James Gosling, the creator of Java, in 2008
 
The TIOBE programming language popularity index graph from 2002 to 2022. Java was steadily on the top from mid-2015 to early 2020.

James Gosling, Mike Sheridan, and Patrick Naughton initiated the Java language project in June 1991.[22] Java was originally designed for interactive television, but it was too advanced for the digital cable television industry at the time.[23] The language was initially called Oak after an oak tree that stood outside Gosling's office. Later the project went by the name Green and was finally renamed Java, from Java coffee, a type of coffee from Indonesia.[24] Gosling designed Java with a C/C++-style syntax that system and application programmers would find familiar.[25]

Sun Microsystems released the first public implementation as Java 1.0 in 1996.[26] It promised write once, run anywhere (WORA) functionality, providing no-cost run-times on popular platforms. Fairly secure and featuring configurable security, it allowed network- and file-access restrictions. Major web browsers soon incorporated the ability to run Java applets within web pages, and Java quickly became popular. The Java 1.0 compiler was re-written in Java by Arthur van Hoff to comply strictly with the Java 1.0 language specification.[27] With the advent of Java 2 (released initially as J2SE 1.2 in December 1998 – 1999), new versions had multiple configurations built for different types of platforms. J2EE included technologies and APIs for enterprise applications typically run in server environments, while J2ME featured APIs optimized for mobile applications. The desktop version was renamed J2SE. In 2006, for marketing purposes, Sun renamed new J2 versions as Java EE, Java ME, and Java SE, respectively.

In 1997, Sun Microsystems approached the ISO/IEC JTC 1 standards body and later the Ecma International to formalize Java, but it soon withdrew from the process.[28][29][30] Java remains a de facto standard, controlled through the Java Community Process.[31] At one time, Sun made most of its Java implementations available without charge, despite their proprietary software status. Sun generated revenue from Java through the selling of licenses for specialized products such as the Java Enterprise System.

On November 13, 2006, Sun released much of its Java virtual machine (JVM) as free and open-source software (FOSS), under the terms of the GPL-2.0-only license. On May 8, 2007, Sun finished the process, making all of its JVM's core code available under free software/open-source distribution terms, aside from a small portion of code to which Sun did not hold the copyright.[32]

Sun's vice-president Rich Green said that Sun's ideal role with regard to Java was as an evangelist.[33] Following Oracle Corporation's acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2009–10, Oracle has described itself as the steward of Java technology with a relentless commitment to fostering a community of participation and transparency.[34] This did not prevent Oracle from filing a lawsuit against Google shortly after that for using Java inside the Android SDK (see the Android section).

On April 2, 2010, James Gosling resigned from Oracle.[35]

In January 2016, Oracle announced that Java run-time environments based on JDK 9 will discontinue the browser plugin.[36]

Java software runs on everything from laptops to data centers, game consoles to scientific supercomputers.[37]

Oracle (and others) highly recommend uninstalling outdated and unsupported versions of Java, due to unresolved security issues in older versions.[38]

Principles

There were five primary goals in the creation of the Java language:[18]

  1. It must be simple, object-oriented, and familiar.
  2. It must be robust and secure.
  3. It must be architecture-neutral and portable.
  4. It must execute with high performance.
  5. It must be interpreted, threaded, and dynamic.

Versions

As of September 2021, Java 8, 11 and 17 are supported as Long-Term Support (LTS) versions.[39]

Oracle released the last zero-cost public update for the legacy version Java 8 LTS in January 2019 for commercial use, although it will otherwise still support Java 8 with public updates for personal use indefinitely. Other vendors have begun to offer zero-cost builds of OpenJDK 18 and 8, 11 and 17 that are still receiving security and other upgrades.

Major release versions of Java, along with their release dates:

Version Date
JDK Beta 1995
JDK 1.0 January 23, 1996[40]
JDK 1.1 February 19, 1997
J2SE 1.2 December 8, 1998
J2SE 1.3 May 8, 2000
J2SE 1.4 February 6, 2002
J2SE 5.0 September 30, 2004
Java SE 6 December 11, 2006
Java SE 7 July 28, 2011
Java SE 8 (LTS) March 18, 2014
Java SE 9 September 21, 2017
Java SE 10 March 20, 2018
Java SE 11 (LTS) September 25, 2018[41]
Java SE 12 March 19, 2019
Java SE 13 September 17, 2019
Java SE 14 March 17, 2020
Java SE 15 September 15, 2020[42]
Java SE 16 March 16, 2021
Java SE 17 (LTS) September 14, 2021
Java SE 18 March 22, 2022
Java SE 19 September 20, 2022
Java SE 20 March 21, 2023

Editions

Sun has defined and supports four editions of Java targeting different application environments and segmented many of its APIs so that they belong to one of the platforms. The platforms are:

The classes in the Java APIs are organized into separate groups called packages. Each package contains a set of related interfaces, classes, subpackages and exceptions.

Sun also provided an edition called Personal Java that has been superseded by later, standards-based Java ME configuration-profile pairings.

Execution system

Java JVM and bytecode

One design goal of Java is portability, which means that programs written for the Java platform must run similarly on any combination of hardware and operating system with adequate run time support. This is achieved by compiling the Java language code to an intermediate representation called Java bytecode, instead of directly to architecture-specific machine code. Java bytecode instructions are analogous to machine code, but they are intended to be executed by a virtual machine (VM) written specifically for the host hardware. End-users commonly use a Java Runtime Environment (JRE) installed on their device for standalone Java applications or a web browser for Java applets.

Standard libraries provide a generic way to access host-specific features such as graphics, threading, and networking.

The use of universal bytecode makes porting simple. However, the overhead of interpreting bytecode into machine instructions made interpreted programs almost always run more slowly than native executables. Just-in-time (JIT) compilers that compile byte-codes to machine code during runtime were introduced from an early stage. Java's Hotspot compiler is actually two compilers in one; and with GraalVM (included in e.g. Java 11, but removed as of Java 16) allowing tiered compilation.[47] Java itself is platform-independent and is adapted to the particular platform it is to run on by a Java virtual machine (JVM) for it, which translates the Java bytecode into the platform's machine language.[48]

Performance

Programs written in Java have a reputation for being slower and requiring more memory than those written in C++.[49][50] However, Java programs' execution speed improved significantly with the introduction of just-in-time compilation in 1997/1998 for Java 1.1,[51] the addition of language features supporting better code analysis (such as inner classes, the StringBuilder class, optional assertions, etc.), and optimizations in the Java virtual machine, such as HotSpot becoming Sun's default JVM in 2000. With Java 1.5, the performance was improved with the addition of the java.util.concurrent package, including lock-free implementations of the ConcurrentMaps and other multi-core collections, and it was improved further with Java 1.6.

Non-JVM

Some platforms offer direct hardware support for Java; there are micro controllers that can run Java bytecode in hardware instead of a software Java virtual machine,[52] and some ARM-based processors could have hardware support for executing Java bytecode through their Jazelle option, though support has mostly been dropped in current implementations of ARM.

Automatic memory management

Java uses an automatic garbage collector to manage memory in the object lifecycle. The programmer determines when objects are created, and the Java runtime is responsible for recovering the memory once objects are no longer in use. Once no references to an object remain, the unreachable memory becomes eligible to be freed automatically by the garbage collector. Something similar to a memory leak may still occur if a programmer's code holds a reference to an object that is no longer needed, typically when objects that are no longer needed are stored in containers that are still in use. If methods for a non-existent object are called, a null pointer exception is thrown.[53][54]

One of the ideas behind Java's automatic memory management model is that programmers can be spared the burden of having to perform manual memory management. In some languages, memory for the creation of objects is implicitly allocated on the stack or explicitly allocated and deallocated from the heap. In the latter case, the responsibility of managing memory resides with the programmer. If the program does not deallocate an object, a memory leak occurs. If the program attempts to access or deallocate memory that has already been deallocated, the result is undefined and difficult to predict, and the program is likely to become unstable or crash. This can be partially remedied by the use of smart pointers, but these add overhead and complexity. Note that garbage collection does not prevent logical memory leaks, i.e. those where the memory is still referenced but never used.

Garbage collection may happen at any time. Ideally, it will occur when a program is idle. It is guaranteed to be triggered if there is insufficient free memory on the heap to allocate a new object; this can cause a program to stall momentarily. Explicit memory management is not possible in Java.

Java does not support C/C++ style pointer arithmetic, where object addresses can be arithmetically manipulated (e.g. by adding or subtracting an offset). This allows the garbage collector to relocate referenced objects and ensures type safety and security.

As in C++ and some other object-oriented languages, variables of Java's primitive data types are either stored directly in fields (for objects) or on the stack (for methods) rather than on the heap, as is commonly true for non-primitive data types (but see escape analysis). This was a conscious decision by Java's designers for performance reasons.

Java contains multiple types of garbage collectors. Since Java 9, HotSpot uses the Garbage First Garbage Collector (G1GC) as the default.[55] However, there are also several other garbage collectors that can be used to manage the heap. For most applications in Java, G1GC is sufficient. Previously, the Parallel Garbage Collector was used in Java 8.

Having solved the memory management problem does not relieve the programmer of the burden of handling properly other kinds of resources, like network or database connections, file handles, etc., especially in the presence of exceptions.

Syntax

 
Dependency graph of the Java Core classes (created with jdeps and Gephi)

The syntax of Java is largely influenced by C++ and C. Unlike C++, which combines the syntax for structured, generic, and object-oriented programming, Java was built almost exclusively as an object-oriented language.[18] All code is written inside classes, and every data item is an object, with the exception of the primitive data types, (i.e. integers, floating-point numbers, boolean values, and characters), which are not objects for performance reasons. Java reuses some popular aspects of C++ (such as the printf method).

Unlike C++, Java does not support operator overloading[56] or multiple inheritance for classes, though multiple inheritance is supported for interfaces.[57]

Java uses comments similar to those of C++. There are three different styles of comments: a single line style marked with two slashes (//), a multiple line style opened with /* and closed with */, and the Javadoc commenting style opened with /** and closed with */. The Javadoc style of commenting allows the user to run the Javadoc executable to create documentation for the program and can be read by some integrated development environments (IDEs) such as Eclipse to allow developers to access documentation within the IDE.

Hello world example

The traditional Hello world program can be written in Java as:[58]

public class HelloWorldApp {  public static void main(String[] args) {  System.out.println("Hello World!"); // Prints the string to the console.  } } 

All source files must be named after the public class they contain, appending the suffix .java, for example, HelloWorldApp.java. It must first be compiled into bytecode, using a Java compiler, producing a file with the .class suffix (HelloWorldApp.class, in this case). Only then can it be executed or launched. The Java source file may only contain one public class, but it can contain multiple classes with a non-public access modifier and any number of public inner classes. When the source file contains multiple classes, it is necessary to make one class (introduced by the class keyword) public (preceded by the public keyword) and name the source file with that public class name.

A class that is not declared public may be stored in any .java file. The compiler will generate a class file for each class defined in the source file. The name of the class file is the name of the class, with .class appended. For class file generation, anonymous classes are treated as if their name were the concatenation of the name of their enclosing class, a $, and an integer.

The keyword public denotes that a method can be called from code in other classes, or that a class may be used by classes outside the class hierarchy. The class hierarchy is related to the name of the directory in which the .java file is located. This is called an access level modifier. Other access level modifiers include the keywords private (a method that can only be accessed in the same class) and protected (which allows code from the same package to access). If a piece of code attempts to access private methods or protected methods, the JVM will throw a SecurityException

The keyword static[19] in front of a method indicates a static method, which is associated only with the class and not with any specific instance of that class. Only static methods can be invoked without a reference to an object. Static methods cannot access any class members that are not also static. Methods that are not designated static are instance methods and require a specific instance of a class to operate.

The keyword void indicates that the main method does not return any value to the caller. If a Java program is to exit with an error code, it must call System.exit() explicitly.

The method name main is not a keyword in the Java language. It is simply the name of the method the Java launcher calls to pass control to the program. Java classes that run in managed environments such as applets and Enterprise JavaBeans do not use or need a main() method. A Java program may contain multiple classes that have main methods, which means that the VM needs to be explicitly told which class to launch from.

The main method must accept an array of String objects. By convention, it is referenced as args although any other legal identifier name can be used. Since Java 5, the main method can also use variable arguments, in the form of public static void main(String... args), allowing the main method to be invoked with an arbitrary number of String arguments. The effect of this alternate declaration is semantically identical (to the args parameter which is still an array of String objects), but it allows an alternative syntax for creating and passing the array.

The Java launcher launches Java by loading a given class (specified on the command line or as an attribute in a JAR) and starting its public static void main(String[]) method. Stand-alone programs must declare this method explicitly. The String[] args parameter is an array of String objects containing any arguments passed to the class. The parameters to main are often passed by means of a command line.

Printing is part of a Java standard library: The System class defines a public static field called out. The out object is an instance of the PrintStream class and provides many methods for printing data to standard out, including println(String) which also appends a new line to the passed string.

The string "Hello World!" is automatically converted to a String object by the compiler.

Example with methods

// This is an example of a single line comment using two slashes  /*  * This is an example of a multiple line comment using the slash and asterisk.  * This type of comment can be used to hold a lot of information or deactivate  * code, but it is very important to remember to close the comment.  */  package fibsandlies;  import java.util.Map; import java.util.HashMap;  /**  * This is an example of a Javadoc comment; Javadoc can compile documentation  * from this text. Javadoc comments must immediately precede the class, method,  * or field being documented.  * @author Wikipedia Volunteers  */ public class FibCalculator extends Fibonacci implements Calculator {  private static Map<Integer, Integer> memoized = new HashMap<>();   /*  * The main method written as follows is used by the JVM as a starting point  * for the program.  */  public static void main(String[] args) {  memoized.put(1, 1);  memoized.put(2, 1);  System.out.println(fibonacci(12)); // Get the 12th Fibonacci number and print to console  }   /**  * An example of a method written in Java, wrapped in a class.  * Given a non-negative number FIBINDEX, returns  * the Nth Fibonacci number, where N equals FIBINDEX.  *   * @param fibIndex The index of the Fibonacci number  * @return the Fibonacci number  */  public static int fibonacci(int fibIndex) {  if (memoized.containsKey(fibIndex)) {  return memoized.get(fibIndex);  }   int answer = fibonacci(fibIndex - 1) + fibonacci(fibIndex - 2);  memoized.put(fibIndex, answer);  return answer;  } } 

Special classes

Applet

Java applets were programs that were embedded in other applications, typically in a Web page displayed in a web browser. The Java applet API is now deprecated since Java 9 in 2017.[59][60]

Servlet

Java servlet technology provides Web developers with a simple, consistent mechanism for extending the functionality of a Web server and for accessing existing business systems. Servlets are server-side Java EE components that generate responses to requests from clients. Most of the time, this means generating HTML pages in response to HTTP requests, although there are a number of other standard servlet classes available, for example for WebSocket communication.

The Java servlet API has to some extent been superseded (but still used under the hood) by two standard Java technologies for web services:

Typical implementations of these APIs on Application Servers or Servlet Containers use a standard servlet for handling all interactions with the HTTP requests and responses that delegate to the web service methods for the actual business logic.

JavaServer Pages

JavaServer Pages (JSP) are server-side Java EE components that generate responses, typically HTML pages, to HTTP requests from clients. JSPs embed Java code in an HTML page by using the special delimiters <% and %>. A JSP is compiled to a Java servlet, a Java application in its own right, the first time it is accessed. After that, the generated servlet creates the response.[61]

Swing application

Swing is a graphical user interface library for the Java SE platform. It is possible to specify a different look and feel through the pluggable look and feel system of Swing. Clones of Windows, GTK+, and Motif are supplied by Sun. Apple also provides an Aqua look and feel for macOS. Where prior implementations of these looks and feels may have been considered lacking, Swing in Java SE 6 addresses this problem by using more native GUI widget drawing routines of the underlying platforms.[62]

JavaFX application

JavaFX is a software platform for creating and delivering desktop applications, as well as rich web applications that can run across a wide variety of devices. JavaFX is intended to replace Swing as the standard GUI library for Java SE, but since JDK 11 JavaFX has not been in the core JDK and instead in a separate module.[63] JavaFX has support for desktop computers and web browsers on Microsoft Windows, Linux, and macOS. JavaFX does not have support for native OS look and feels.[64]

Generics

In 2004, generics were added to the Java language, as part of J2SE 5.0. Prior to the introduction of generics, each variable declaration had to be of a specific type. For container classes, for example, this is a problem because there is no easy way to create a container that accepts only specific types of objects. Either the container operates on all subtypes of a class or interface, usually Object, or a different container class has to be created for each contained class. Generics allow compile-time type checking without having to create many container classes, each containing almost identical code. In addition to enabling more efficient code, certain runtime exceptions are prevented from occurring, by issuing compile-time errors. If Java prevented all runtime type errors (ClassCastExceptions) from occurring, it would be type safe.

In 2016, the type system of Java was proven unsound in that it is possible to use generics to construct classes and methods that allow assignment of an instance one class to a variable of another unrelated class. Such code is accepted by the compiler, but fails at run time with a class cast exception.[65]

Criticism

Criticisms directed at Java include the implementation of generics,[66] speed,[67] the handling of unsigned numbers,[68] the implementation of floating-point arithmetic,[69] and a history of security vulnerabilities in the primary Java VM implementation HotSpot.[70]

Class libraries

The Java Class Library is the standard library, developed to support application development in Java. It is controlled by Oracle in cooperation with others through the Java Community Process program.[71] Companies or individuals participating in this process can influence the design and development of the APIs. This process has been a subject of controversy during the 2010s.[72] The class library contains features such as:

Documentation

Javadoc is a comprehensive documentation system, created by Sun Microsystems. It provides developers with an organized system for documenting their code. Javadoc comments have an extra asterisk at the beginning, i.e. the delimiters are /** and */, whereas the normal multi-line comments in Java are delimited by /* and */, and single-line comments start with //.[76]

Implementations

Oracle Corporation is the current owner of the official implementation of the Java SE platform, following their acquisition of Sun Microsystems on January 27, 2010. This implementation is based on the original implementation of Java by Sun. The Oracle implementation is available for Microsoft Windows (still works for XP, while only later versions are currently officially supported), macOS, Linux, and Solaris. Because Java lacks any formal standardization recognized by Ecma International, ISO/IEC, ANSI, or other third-party standards organizations, the Oracle implementation is the de facto standard.

The Oracle implementation is packaged into two different distributions: The Java Runtime Environment (JRE) which contains the parts of the Java SE platform required to run Java programs and is intended for end users, and the Java Development Kit (JDK), which is intended for software developers and includes development tools such as the Java compiler, Javadoc, Jar, and a debugger. Oracle has also released GraalVM, a high performance Java dynamic compiler and interpreter.

OpenJDK is another notable Java SE implementation that is licensed under the GNU GPL. The implementation started when Sun began releasing the Java source code under the GPL. As of Java SE 7, OpenJDK is the official Java reference implementation.

The goal of Java is to make all implementations of Java compatible. Historically, Sun's trademark license for usage of the Java brand insists that all implementations be compatible. This resulted in a legal dispute with Microsoft after Sun claimed that the Microsoft implementation did not support RMI or JNI and had added platform-specific features of their own. Sun sued in 1997, and, in 2001, won a settlement of US$20 million, as well as a court order enforcing the terms of the license from Sun.[77] As a result, Microsoft no longer ships Java with Windows.

Platform-independent Java is essential to Java EE, and an even more rigorous validation is required to certify an implementation. This environment enables portable server-side applications.

Use outside the Java platform

The Java programming language requires the presence of a software platform in order for compiled programs to be executed.

Oracle supplies the Java platform for use with Java. The Android SDK is an alternative software platform, used primarily for developing Android applications with its own GUI system.

Android

The Java language is a key pillar in Android, an open source mobile operating system. Although Android, built on the Linux kernel, is written largely in C, the Android SDK uses the Java language as the basis for Android applications but does not use any of its standard GUI, SE, ME or other established Java standards.[78] The bytecode language supported by the Android SDK is incompatible with Java bytecode and runs on its own virtual machine, optimized for low-memory devices such as smartphones and tablet computers. Depending on the Android version, the bytecode is either interpreted by the Dalvik virtual machine or compiled into native code by the Android Runtime.

Android does not provide the full Java SE standard library, although the Android SDK does include an independent implementation of a large subset of it. It supports Java 6 and some Java 7 features, offering an implementation compatible with the standard library (Apache Harmony).

Controversy

The use of Java-related technology in Android led to a legal dispute between Oracle and Google. On May 7, 2012, a San Francisco jury found that if APIs could be copyrighted, then Google had infringed Oracle's copyrights by the use of Java in Android devices.[79] District Judge William Alsup ruled on May 31, 2012, that APIs cannot be copyrighted,[80] but this was reversed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in May 2014.[81] On May 26, 2016, the district court decided in favor of Google, ruling the copyright infringement of the Java API in Android constitutes fair use.[82] In March 2018, this ruling was overturned by the Appeals Court, which sent down the case of determining the damages to federal court in San Francisco.[83] Google filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court of the United States in January 2019 to challenge the two rulings that were made by the Appeals Court in Oracle's favor.[84] On April 5, 2021, the Court ruled 6-2 in Google's favor, that its use of Java APIs should be considered fair use. However, the court refused to rule on the copyrightability of APIs, choosing instead to determine their ruling by considering Java's API copyrightable "purely for argument’s sake."[85]

See also

Comparison of Java with other languages

References

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Works cited

  • Gosling, James; Joy, Bill; Steele, Guy; Bracha, Gilad; Buckley, Alex (2014). The Java® Language Specification (PDF) (Java SE 8 ed.). (PDF) from the original on October 21, 2014. Retrieved November 18, 2014.
  • Gosling, James; Joy, Bill; Steele, Guy L. Jr.; Bracha, Gilad (2005). The Java Language Specification (3rd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-321-24678-0. from the original on February 14, 2012. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  • Lindholm, Tim; Yellin, Frank (1999). The Java Virtual Machine Specification (2nd ed.). Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-43294-3. from the original on September 25, 2011. Retrieved February 8, 2019.

External links

  • Official Website
  •   The dictionary definition of Java at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Java at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Java Programming at Wikibooks
  •   Learning materials related to Java at Wikiversity
  • Java Weekly

java, programming, language, confused, with, java, software, platform, javascript, javanese, language, java, high, level, class, based, object, oriented, programming, language, that, designed, have, implementation, dependencies, possible, general, purpose, pro. Not to be confused with Java software platform JavaScript or Javanese language Java is a high level class based object oriented programming language that is designed to have as few implementation dependencies as possible It is a general purpose programming language intended to let programmers write once run anywhere WORA 17 meaning that compiled Java code can run on all platforms that support Java without the need to recompile 18 Java applications are typically compiled to bytecode that can run on any Java virtual machine JVM regardless of the underlying computer architecture The syntax of Java is similar to C and C but has fewer low level facilities than either of them The Java runtime provides dynamic capabilities such as reflection and runtime code modification that are typically not available in traditional compiled languages As of 2019 update Java was one of the most popular programming languages in use according to GitHub citation not found 19 20 particularly for client server web applications with a reported 9 million developers 21 JavaParadigmMulti paradigm generic object oriented class based functional imperative reflective concurrentDesigned byJames GoslingDeveloperSun MicrosystemsFirst appearedMay 23 1995 27 years ago 1995 05 23 1 Stable releaseJava SE 19 2 20 September 2022 6 months ago 20 September 2022 Typing disciplineStatic strong safe nominative manifestFilename extensions java class jar jmodWebsiteoracle wbr com wbr java wbr java wbr com dev wbr javaInfluenced byCLU 3 Simula67 3 Lisp 3 Smalltalk 3 Ada 83 C 4 C 5 Eiffel 6 Mesa 7 Modula 3 8 Oberon 9 Objective C 10 UCSD Pascal 11 12 Object Pascal 13 InfluencedAda 2005 BeanShell C Chapel 14 Clojure ECMAScript Fantom Gambas 15 Groovy Hack 16 Haxe J Kotlin PHP Python Scala Seed7 Vala JavaScript JS Java Programming at WikibooksJava was originally developed by James Gosling at Sun Microsystems It was released in May 1995 as a core component of Sun Microsystems Java platform The original and reference implementation Java compilers virtual machines and class libraries were originally released by Sun under proprietary licenses As of May 2007 in compliance with the specifications of the Java Community Process Sun had relicensed most of its Java technologies under the GPL 2 0 only license Oracle offers its own HotSpot Java Virtual Machine however the official reference implementation is the OpenJDK JVM which is free open source software and used by most developers and is the default JVM for almost all Linux distributions As of September 2022 update Java 19 is the latest version while Java 17 11 and 8 are the current long term support LTS versions Contents 1 History 1 1 Principles 1 2 Versions 2 Editions 3 Execution system 3 1 Java JVM and bytecode 3 1 1 Performance 3 2 Non JVM 3 3 Automatic memory management 4 Syntax 4 1 Hello world example 4 2 Example with methods 5 Special classes 5 1 Applet 5 2 Servlet 5 3 JavaServer Pages 5 4 Swing application 5 5 JavaFX application 5 6 Generics 6 Criticism 7 Class libraries 8 Documentation 9 Implementations 10 Use outside the Java platform 10 1 Android 10 1 1 Controversy 11 See also 11 1 Comparison of Java with other languages 12 References 13 Works cited 14 External linksHistoryThe neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Java software platform History Duke the Java mascot James Gosling the creator of Java in 2008 The TIOBE programming language popularity index graph from 2002 to 2022 Java was steadily on the top from mid 2015 to early 2020 James Gosling Mike Sheridan and Patrick Naughton initiated the Java language project in June 1991 22 Java was originally designed for interactive television but it was too advanced for the digital cable television industry at the time 23 The language was initially called Oak after an oak tree that stood outside Gosling s office Later the project went by the name Green and was finally renamed Java from Java coffee a type of coffee from Indonesia 24 Gosling designed Java with a C C style syntax that system and application programmers would find familiar 25 Sun Microsystems released the first public implementation as Java 1 0 in 1996 26 It promised write once run anywhere WORA functionality providing no cost run times on popular platforms Fairly secure and featuring configurable security it allowed network and file access restrictions Major web browsers soon incorporated the ability to run Java applets within web pages and Java quickly became popular The Java 1 0 compiler was re written in Java by Arthur van Hoff to comply strictly with the Java 1 0 language specification 27 With the advent of Java 2 released initially as J2SE 1 2 in December 1998 1999 new versions had multiple configurations built for different types of platforms J2EE included technologies and APIs for enterprise applications typically run in server environments while J2ME featured APIs optimized for mobile applications The desktop version was renamed J2SE In 2006 for marketing purposes Sun renamed new J2 versions as Java EE Java ME and Java SE respectively In 1997 Sun Microsystems approached the ISO IEC JTC 1 standards body and later the Ecma International to formalize Java but it soon withdrew from the process 28 29 30 Java remains a de facto standard controlled through the Java Community Process 31 At one time Sun made most of its Java implementations available without charge despite their proprietary software status Sun generated revenue from Java through the selling of licenses for specialized products such as the Java Enterprise System On November 13 2006 Sun released much of its Java virtual machine JVM as free and open source software FOSS under the terms of the GPL 2 0 only license On May 8 2007 Sun finished the process making all of its JVM s core code available under free software open source distribution terms aside from a small portion of code to which Sun did not hold the copyright 32 Sun s vice president Rich Green said that Sun s ideal role with regard to Java was as an evangelist 33 Following Oracle Corporation s acquisition of Sun Microsystems in 2009 10 Oracle has described itself as the steward of Java technology with a relentless commitment to fostering a community of participation and transparency 34 This did not prevent Oracle from filing a lawsuit against Google shortly after that for using Java inside the Android SDK see the Android section On April 2 2010 James Gosling resigned from Oracle 35 In January 2016 Oracle announced that Java run time environments based on JDK 9 will discontinue the browser plugin 36 Java software runs on everything from laptops to data centers game consoles to scientific supercomputers 37 Oracle and others highly recommend uninstalling outdated and unsupported versions of Java due to unresolved security issues in older versions 38 Principles There were five primary goals in the creation of the Java language 18 It must be simple object oriented and familiar It must be robust and secure It must be architecture neutral and portable It must execute with high performance It must be interpreted threaded and dynamic Versions Main article Java version history As of September 2021 update Java 8 11 and 17 are supported as Long Term Support LTS versions 39 Oracle released the last zero cost public update for the legacy version Java 8 LTS in January 2019 for commercial use although it will otherwise still support Java 8 with public updates for personal use indefinitely Other vendors have begun to offer zero cost builds of OpenJDK 18 and 8 11 and 17 that are still receiving security and other upgrades Major release versions of Java along with their release dates Version DateJDK Beta 1995JDK 1 0 January 23 1996 40 JDK 1 1 February 19 1997J2SE 1 2 December 8 1998J2SE 1 3 May 8 2000J2SE 1 4 February 6 2002J2SE 5 0 September 30 2004Java SE 6 December 11 2006Java SE 7 July 28 2011Java SE 8 LTS March 18 2014Java SE 9 September 21 2017Java SE 10 March 20 2018Java SE 11 LTS September 25 2018 41 Java SE 12 March 19 2019Java SE 13 September 17 2019Java SE 14 March 17 2020Java SE 15 September 15 2020 42 Java SE 16 March 16 2021Java SE 17 LTS September 14 2021Java SE 18 March 22 2022Java SE 19 September 20 2022Java SE 20 March 21 2023EditionsSee also Free Java implementations Class library Sun has defined and supports four editions of Java targeting different application environments and segmented many of its APIs so that they belong to one of the platforms The platforms are Java Card for smart cards 43 Java Platform Micro Edition Java ME targeting environments with limited resources 44 Java Platform Standard Edition Java SE targeting workstation environments 45 Java Platform Enterprise Edition Java EE targeting large distributed enterprise or Internet environments 46 The classes in the Java APIs are organized into separate groups called packages Each package contains a set of related interfaces classes subpackages and exceptions Sun also provided an edition called Personal Java that has been superseded by later standards based Java ME configuration profile pairings Execution systemJava JVM and bytecode Main articles Java software platform and Java virtual machine One design goal of Java is portability which means that programs written for the Java platform must run similarly on any combination of hardware and operating system with adequate run time support This is achieved by compiling the Java language code to an intermediate representation called Java bytecode instead of directly to architecture specific machine code Java bytecode instructions are analogous to machine code but they are intended to be executed by a virtual machine VM written specifically for the host hardware End users commonly use a Java Runtime Environment JRE installed on their device for standalone Java applications or a web browser for Java applets Standard libraries provide a generic way to access host specific features such as graphics threading and networking The use of universal bytecode makes porting simple However the overhead of interpreting bytecode into machine instructions made interpreted programs almost always run more slowly than native executables Just in time JIT compilers that compile byte codes to machine code during runtime were introduced from an early stage Java s Hotspot compiler is actually two compilers in one and with GraalVM included in e g Java 11 but removed as of Java 16 allowing tiered compilation 47 Java itself is platform independent and is adapted to the particular platform it is to run on by a Java virtual machine JVM for it which translates the Java bytecode into the platform s machine language 48 Performance Main article Java performance Programs written in Java have a reputation for being slower and requiring more memory than those written in C 49 50 However Java programs execution speed improved significantly with the introduction of just in time compilation in 1997 1998 for Java 1 1 51 the addition of language features supporting better code analysis such as inner classes the StringBuilder class optional assertions etc and optimizations in the Java virtual machine such as HotSpot becoming Sun s default JVM in 2000 With Java 1 5 the performance was improved with the addition of the java util concurrent package including lock free implementations of the ConcurrentMaps and other multi core collections and it was improved further with Java 1 6 Non JVM Some platforms offer direct hardware support for Java there are micro controllers that can run Java bytecode in hardware instead of a software Java virtual machine 52 and some ARM based processors could have hardware support for executing Java bytecode through their Jazelle option though support has mostly been dropped in current implementations of ARM Automatic memory management Java uses an automatic garbage collector to manage memory in the object lifecycle The programmer determines when objects are created and the Java runtime is responsible for recovering the memory once objects are no longer in use Once no references to an object remain the unreachable memory becomes eligible to be freed automatically by the garbage collector Something similar to a memory leak may still occur if a programmer s code holds a reference to an object that is no longer needed typically when objects that are no longer needed are stored in containers that are still in use If methods for a non existent object are called a null pointer exception is thrown 53 54 One of the ideas behind Java s automatic memory management model is that programmers can be spared the burden of having to perform manual memory management In some languages memory for the creation of objects is implicitly allocated on the stack or explicitly allocated and deallocated from the heap In the latter case the responsibility of managing memory resides with the programmer If the program does not deallocate an object a memory leak occurs If the program attempts to access or deallocate memory that has already been deallocated the result is undefined and difficult to predict and the program is likely to become unstable or crash This can be partially remedied by the use of smart pointers but these add overhead and complexity Note that garbage collection does not prevent logical memory leaks i e those where the memory is still referenced but never used Garbage collection may happen at any time Ideally it will occur when a program is idle It is guaranteed to be triggered if there is insufficient free memory on the heap to allocate a new object this can cause a program to stall momentarily Explicit memory management is not possible in Java Java does not support C C style pointer arithmetic where object addresses can be arithmetically manipulated e g by adding or subtracting an offset This allows the garbage collector to relocate referenced objects and ensures type safety and security As in C and some other object oriented languages variables of Java s primitive data types are either stored directly in fields for objects or on the stack for methods rather than on the heap as is commonly true for non primitive data types but see escape analysis This was a conscious decision by Java s designers for performance reasons Java contains multiple types of garbage collectors Since Java 9 HotSpot uses the Garbage First Garbage Collector G1GC as the default 55 However there are also several other garbage collectors that can be used to manage the heap For most applications in Java G1GC is sufficient Previously the Parallel Garbage Collector was used in Java 8 Having solved the memory management problem does not relieve the programmer of the burden of handling properly other kinds of resources like network or database connections file handles etc especially in the presence of exceptions SyntaxMain article Java syntax Dependency graph of the Java Core classes created with jdeps and Gephi The syntax of Java is largely influenced by C and C Unlike C which combines the syntax for structured generic and object oriented programming Java was built almost exclusively as an object oriented language 18 All code is written inside classes and every data item is an object with the exception of the primitive data types i e integers floating point numbers boolean values and characters which are not objects for performance reasons Java reuses some popular aspects of C such as the span class n printf span method Unlike C Java does not support operator overloading 56 or multiple inheritance for classes though multiple inheritance is supported for interfaces 57 Java uses comments similar to those of C There are three different styles of comments a single line style marked with two slashes a multiple line style opened with and closed with and the Javadoc commenting style opened with and closed with The Javadoc style of commenting allows the user to run the Javadoc executable to create documentation for the program and can be read by some integrated development environments IDEs such as Eclipse to allow developers to access documentation within the IDE Hello world example The traditional Hello world program can be written in Java as 58 public class HelloWorldApp public static void main String args System out println Hello World Prints the string to the console All source files must be named after the public class they contain appending the suffix java for example HelloWorldApp java It must first be compiled into bytecode using a Java compiler producing a file with the class suffix HelloWorldApp class in this case Only then can it be executed or launched The Java source file may only contain one public class but it can contain multiple classes with a non public access modifier and any number of public inner classes When the source file contains multiple classes it is necessary to make one class introduced by the b class b keyword public preceded by the b public b keyword and name the source file with that public class name A class that is not declared public may be stored in any java file The compiler will generate a class file for each class defined in the source file The name of the class file is the name of the class with class appended For class file generation anonymous classes are treated as if their name were the concatenation of the name of their enclosing class a and an integer The keyword b public b denotes that a method can be called from code in other classes or that a class may be used by classes outside the class hierarchy The class hierarchy is related to the name of the directory in which the java file is located This is called an access level modifier Other access level modifiers include the keywords b private b a method that can only be accessed in the same class and b protected b which allows code from the same package to access If a piece of code attempts to access private methods or protected methods the JVM will throw a SecurityExceptionThe keyword b static b 19 in front of a method indicates a static method which is associated only with the class and not with any specific instance of that class Only static methods can be invoked without a reference to an object Static methods cannot access any class members that are not also static Methods that are not designated static are instance methods and require a specific instance of a class to operate The keyword b void b indicates that the main method does not return any value to the caller If a Java program is to exit with an error code it must call System exit explicitly The method name main is not a keyword in the Java language It is simply the name of the method the Java launcher calls to pass control to the program Java classes that run in managed environments such as applets and Enterprise JavaBeans do not use or need a main method A Java program may contain multiple classes that have main methods which means that the VM needs to be explicitly told which class to launch from The main method must accept an array of String objects By convention it is referenced as b args b although any other legal identifier name can be used Since Java 5 the main method can also use variable arguments in the form of public static void main String args allowing the main method to be invoked with an arbitrary number of String arguments The effect of this alternate declaration is semantically identical to the args parameter which is still an array of String objects but it allows an alternative syntax for creating and passing the array The Java launcher launches Java by loading a given class specified on the command line or as an attribute in a JAR and starting its public static void main String method Stand alone programs must declare this method explicitly The String args parameter is an array of String objects containing any arguments passed to the class The parameters to main are often passed by means of a command line Printing is part of a Java standard library The System class defines a public static field called out The out object is an instance of the PrintStream class and provides many methods for printing data to standard out including println String which also appends a new line to the passed string The string Hello World is automatically converted to a String object by the compiler Example with methods This is an example of a single line comment using two slashes This is an example of a multiple line comment using the slash and asterisk This type of comment can be used to hold a lot of information or deactivate code but it is very important to remember to close the comment package fibsandlies import java util Map import java util HashMap This is an example of a Javadoc comment Javadoc can compile documentation from this text Javadoc comments must immediately precede the class method or field being documented author Wikipedia Volunteers public class FibCalculator extends Fibonacci implements Calculator private static Map lt Integer Integer gt memoized new HashMap lt gt The main method written as follows is used by the JVM as a starting point for the program public static void main String args memoized put 1 1 memoized put 2 1 System out println fibonacci 12 Get the 12th Fibonacci number and print to console An example of a method written in Java wrapped in a class Given a non negative number FIBINDEX returns the Nth Fibonacci number where N equals FIBINDEX param fibIndex The index of the Fibonacci number return the Fibonacci number public static int fibonacci int fibIndex if memoized containsKey fibIndex return memoized get fibIndex int answer fibonacci fibIndex 1 fibonacci fibIndex 2 memoized put fibIndex answer return answer Special classesThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Java programming language news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Applet Main article Java applet Java applets were programs that were embedded in other applications typically in a Web page displayed in a web browser The Java applet API is now deprecated since Java 9 in 2017 59 60 Servlet Main article Java servlet Java servlet technology provides Web developers with a simple consistent mechanism for extending the functionality of a Web server and for accessing existing business systems Servlets are server side Java EE components that generate responses to requests from clients Most of the time this means generating HTML pages in response to HTTP requests although there are a number of other standard servlet classes available for example for WebSocket communication The Java servlet API has to some extent been superseded but still used under the hood by two standard Java technologies for web services the Java API for RESTful Web Services JAX RS 2 0 useful for AJAX JSON and REST services and the Java API for XML Web Services JAX WS useful for SOAP Web Services Typical implementations of these APIs on Application Servers or Servlet Containers use a standard servlet for handling all interactions with the HTTP requests and responses that delegate to the web service methods for the actual business logic JavaServer Pages Main article JavaServer Pages JavaServer Pages JSP are server side Java EE components that generate responses typically HTML pages to HTTP requests from clients JSPs embed Java code in an HTML page by using the special delimiters lt and gt A JSP is compiled to a Java servlet a Java application in its own right the first time it is accessed After that the generated servlet creates the response 61 Swing application Main article Swing Java Swing is a graphical user interface library for the Java SE platform It is possible to specify a different look and feel through the pluggable look and feel system of Swing Clones of Windows GTK and Motif are supplied by Sun Apple also provides an Aqua look and feel for macOS Where prior implementations of these looks and feels may have been considered lacking Swing in Java SE 6 addresses this problem by using more native GUI widget drawing routines of the underlying platforms 62 JavaFX application Main article JavaFX JavaFX is a software platform for creating and delivering desktop applications as well as rich web applications that can run across a wide variety of devices JavaFX is intended to replace Swing as the standard GUI library for Java SE but since JDK 11 JavaFX has not been in the core JDK and instead in a separate module 63 JavaFX has support for desktop computers and web browsers on Microsoft Windows Linux and macOS JavaFX does not have support for native OS look and feels 64 Generics Main article Generics in Java In 2004 generics were added to the Java language as part of J2SE 5 0 Prior to the introduction of generics each variable declaration had to be of a specific type For container classes for example this is a problem because there is no easy way to create a container that accepts only specific types of objects Either the container operates on all subtypes of a class or interface usually Object or a different container class has to be created for each contained class Generics allow compile time type checking without having to create many container classes each containing almost identical code In addition to enabling more efficient code certain runtime exceptions are prevented from occurring by issuing compile time errors If Java prevented all runtime type errors ClassCastExceptions from occurring it would be type safe In 2016 the type system of Java was proven unsound in that it is possible to use generics to construct classes and methods that allow assignment of an instance one class to a variable of another unrelated class Such code is accepted by the compiler but fails at run time with a class cast exception 65 CriticismMain article Criticism of Java Criticisms directed at Java include the implementation of generics 66 speed 67 the handling of unsigned numbers 68 the implementation of floating point arithmetic 69 and a history of security vulnerabilities in the primary Java VM implementation HotSpot 70 Class librariesMain article Java Class Library The Java Class Library is the standard library developed to support application development in Java It is controlled by Oracle in cooperation with others through the Java Community Process program 71 Companies or individuals participating in this process can influence the design and development of the APIs This process has been a subject of controversy during the 2010s 72 The class library contains features such as The core libraries which include IO NIO Networking NOTE new HTTP Client since Java 11 Reflection Concurrency Generics Scripting Compiler Functional programming Lambda Streaming Collection libraries that implement data structures such as lists dictionaries trees sets queues and double ended queue or stacks 73 XML Processing Parsing Transforming Validating libraries Security 74 Internationalization and localization libraries 75 The integration libraries which allow the application writer to communicate with external systems These libraries include The Java Database Connectivity JDBC API for database access Java Naming and Directory Interface JNDI for lookup and discovery RMI and CORBA for distributed application development JMX for managing and monitoring applications User interface libraries which include The heavyweight or native Abstract Window Toolkit AWT which provides GUI components the means for laying out those components and the means for handling events from those components The lightweight Swing libraries which are built on AWT but provide non native implementations of the AWT widgetry APIs for audio capture processing and playback JavaFX A platform dependent implementation of the Java virtual machine that is the means by which the bytecodes of the Java libraries and third party applications are executed Plugins which enable applets to be run in web browsers Java Web Start which allows Java applications to be efficiently distributed to end users across the Internet Licensing and documentationDocumentationMain article Javadoc Javadoc is a comprehensive documentation system created by Sun Microsystems It provides developers with an organized system for documenting their code Javadoc comments have an extra asterisk at the beginning i e the delimiters are and whereas the normal multi line comments in Java are delimited by and and single line comments start with 76 ImplementationsSee also Free Java implementations Oracle Corporation is the current owner of the official implementation of the Java SE platform following their acquisition of Sun Microsystems on January 27 2010 This implementation is based on the original implementation of Java by Sun The Oracle implementation is available for Microsoft Windows still works for XP while only later versions are currently officially supported macOS Linux and Solaris Because Java lacks any formal standardization recognized by Ecma International ISO IEC ANSI or other third party standards organizations the Oracle implementation is the de facto standard The Oracle implementation is packaged into two different distributions The Java Runtime Environment JRE which contains the parts of the Java SE platform required to run Java programs and is intended for end users and the Java Development Kit JDK which is intended for software developers and includes development tools such as the Java compiler Javadoc Jar and a debugger Oracle has also released GraalVM a high performance Java dynamic compiler and interpreter OpenJDK is another notable Java SE implementation that is licensed under the GNU GPL The implementation started when Sun began releasing the Java source code under the GPL As of Java SE 7 OpenJDK is the official Java reference implementation The goal of Java is to make all implementations of Java compatible Historically Sun s trademark license for usage of the Java brand insists that all implementations be compatible This resulted in a legal dispute with Microsoft after Sun claimed that the Microsoft implementation did not support RMI or JNI and had added platform specific features of their own Sun sued in 1997 and in 2001 won a settlement of US 20 million as well as a court order enforcing the terms of the license from Sun 77 As a result Microsoft no longer ships Java with Windows Platform independent Java is essential to Java EE and an even more rigorous validation is required to certify an implementation This environment enables portable server side applications Use outside the Java platformThe Java programming language requires the presence of a software platform in order for compiled programs to be executed Oracle supplies the Java platform for use with Java The Android SDK is an alternative software platform used primarily for developing Android applications with its own GUI system Android The Java language is a key pillar in Android an open source mobile operating system Although Android built on the Linux kernel is written largely in C the Android SDK uses the Java language as the basis for Android applications but does not use any of its standard GUI SE ME or other established Java standards 78 The bytecode language supported by the Android SDK is incompatible with Java bytecode and runs on its own virtual machine optimized for low memory devices such as smartphones and tablet computers Depending on the Android version the bytecode is either interpreted by the Dalvik virtual machine or compiled into native code by the Android Runtime Android does not provide the full Java SE standard library although the Android SDK does include an independent implementation of a large subset of it It supports Java 6 and some Java 7 features 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