Analyzing some weird scenarios in following static block :
static {
System.out.println("Inside Static Block");
i=100; // Compilation Successful , why ?
System.out.println(i); // Compilation error "Cannot reference a field before it is defined"
}
private static int i=100;
While same code is working fine while using :
static {
System.out.println("Inside Static Block");
i=100; // Compilation Successful , why ?
System.out.println(MyClass.i); // Compiles OK
}
private static int i=100;
Not sure why variable initialization do not need variable access using class name while SOP requires ?
This is because of the restrictions on the use of Fields during Initialization. In particular, the use of static fields inside a static initialization block before the line on which they are declared can only be on the left hand side of an expression (i.e. an assignment), unless they are fully qualified (in your case MyClass.i
).
So for example: if you insert int j = i;
right after i = 100;
you would get the same error.
The obvious way to solve the issue is to declare static int i;
before the static initialization block.
this is because compilers doing static code analysis, for example the live variable analysis (backward analyze). It calculates for each program point whether the variable will be read before the next write.