Let's say we have a class name Home. What is the difference between Home.this and Home.class? What do they refer to?
See Question&Answers more detail:osLet's say we have a class name Home. What is the difference between Home.this and Home.class? What do they refer to?
See Question&Answers more detail:osHome.this
Home.this
refers to the current instance of the Home
class.
The formal term for this expression appears to be the Qualified this, as referenced in Section 15.8.4 of the Java Language Specification.
In a simple class, saying Home.this
and this
will be equivalent. This expression is only used in cases where there is an inner class, and one needs to refer to the enclosing class.
For example:
class Hello {
class World {
public void doSomething() {
Hello.this.doAnotherThing();
// Here, "this" alone would refer to the instance of
// the World class, so one needs to specify that the
// instance of the Hello class is what is being
// referred to.
}
}
public void doAnotherThing() {
}
}
Home.class
Home.class
will return the representation of the Home
class as a Class
object.
The formal term for this expression is the class literal, as referenced in Section 15.8.2 of the Java Language Specification.
In most cases, this expression is used when one is using reflection, and needs a way to refer to the class itself rather than an instance of the class.