Consider the following Code :
import java.util.*;
class Employee {
String name;
public Employee(String nm) {
this.name=nm;
}
}
public class HashMapKeyNullValue {
Employee e1;
public void display(){
Employee e2=null;
Map map=new HashMap();
map.put(e2, "25");
System.out.println("Getting the Value When e2 is set as KEY");
System.out.println("e2 : "+map.get(e2));
System.out.println("e1 : "+map.get(e1));
System.out.println("null : "+map.get(null));
map.put(e1, "");
System.out.println("Getting the Value when e1 is set as KEY");
System.out.println("e2 : "+map.get(e2));
System.out.println("e1 : "+map.get(e1));
System.out.println("null : "+map.get(null));
map.put(null, null); // null as key and null as value
System.out.println("Getting the Value when setting null as KEY and null as value");
System.out.println("e2 : "+map.get(e2));
System.out.println("e1 : "+map.get(e1));
System.out.println("null : "+map.get(null));
map.put(null, "30");
System.out.println("Getting the Value when setting only null as KEY");
System.out.println("e2 : "+map.get(e2));
System.out.println("e1 : "+map.get(e1));
System.out.println("null : "+map.get(null));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new HashMapKeyNullValue().display();
}
}
The Output of program is :
Getting the Value When e2 is set as KEY
e2 : 25
e1 : 25
null : 25
Getting the Value when e1 is set as KEY
e2 :
e1 :
null :
Getting the Value when setting null as KEY and null as value
e2 : null
e1 : null
null : null
Getting the Value when setting only null as KEY
e2 : 30
e1 : 30
null : 30
Here how e1, e2, and null
as keys are related to each other. Is all three are assigned to same hashcode ? If yes, WHY ?
Since all three seems to be look different the change in one value changes the other. Does it mean that only one entry for key is being made into HashMap
either e1, e2, or null
beacause all treated to be like the same key.
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