I'm learning Kotlin, with a C++ and Java background. I was expecting the following to print true
, not false
. I know that ==
maps to equals
. Does the default implementation of equals
not compare each member, i.e. firstName
and lastName
? If so, wouldn't it see the string values as equal (since ==
maps to equal
again)? Apparently there's something related to equality versus identity that I haven't got right in Kotlin yet.
class MyPerson(val firstName: String, val lastName: String)
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
println(MyPerson("Charlie", "Parker") == MyPerson("Charlie", "Parker"))
}
The default equals
implementation you're describing exists only for data classes. Not for regular classes where the implementation is inherited from Object
, and just make the object equal to itself.
Referential Equality
Java
In Java, the default implementation of equals
compares the variable's reference, which is what ==
always does:
The equals
method for class Object
implements the most discriminating
possible equivalence relation on objects; that is, for any non-null
reference values x and y, this method returns true
if and only if x
and y refer to the same object (x == y
has the value true
).
We call this "referential equality".
Kotlin
In Kotlin ==
is compiled to equals
, whereas ===
is the equivalent of Java's ==
.
Structural Equality
Whenever we want rather structural than referential equality, we can override equals
, which is never done by default for normal classes, as you suggested. In Kotlin, we can use data class
, for which the compiler automatically creates an implementation based on the constructor properties (read here).
Please remember to always override hashCode
if you override equals
(and vice versa) manually and stick to the very strict contracts of both methods. Kotlin's compiler-generated implementations do satisfy the contract.
== for equality
In Java, you can use == to compare primitive and reference types. If applied to primitive types, Java’s == compares values, whereas == on reference types compares references. Thus, in Java, there’s the well-known practice of always calling equals, and there’s the well-known problem of forgetting to do so.
In Kotlin, == is the default way to compare two objects: it compares their values by calling equals under the hood. Thus, if equals is overridden in your class, you can safely compare its instances using ==. For reference comparison, you can use the === operator, which works exactly the same as == in Java.
class MyPerson(val firstName: String, val lastName: String){
override fun equals(other: Any?): Boolean {
if (other == null || other !is MyPerson) return false
return firstName == other.firstName && lastName == other.lastName
}
}
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
println(MyPerson("Charlie", "Parker") == MyPerson("Charlie", "Parker")) // print "true"
}
In your case MyPerson
is used to be a data class
which autogenerate implementations of universal methods (toString
, equals
, and hashCode
).