It depends on the scope where you declare the variable. For instance, local variables don't have default values in which case you will have to assign null manually, where as in case of instance variables assigning null is redundant since instance variables get default values.
public class Test {
Object propertyObj1;
Object propertyObj2 = null; // assigning null is redundant here as instance vars get default values
public void method() {
Object localVariableObj1;
Object localVariableObj1.getClass(); // illegal, a compiler error comes up as local vars don't get default values
Object localVariableObj2 = null;
Object localVariableObj2.getClass(); // no compiler error as localVariableObj2 has been set to null
propertyObj1.getClass(); // no compiler error
propertyObj2.getClass(); // no compiler error
}
}
As mentioned, object reference as instance variable need not be assigned null as those take null as default value. But local variables must be initialized otherwise you will get compilation error saying The local variable s may not have been initialized.
It depends on the scope where you declare the variable. For instance, local variables don't have
default values
in which case you will have to assign null manually, where as in case of instance variables assigning null is redundant since instance variables get default values.As mentioned, object reference as
instance variable
need not be assignednull
as those takenull
as default value. But local variables must be initialized otherwise you will get compilation error sayingThe local variable s may not have been initialized
.For more details you can refer this link