In Java- \"Static Members of the default package cannot be imported\"- Can some one explain this statement? It would be better if its with an example. I am not sure if it ha
as @kageb Brasee mentions : It is true that you cannot do the static import or non-static import of the class which is in a default package.
but there is a case where you can use the class (of default package) in another class: -> And this can only be done if and only if the class (in which you want to use the class of default package) is also present in a default package
if both the classes are in default packages (no matter at what location they are present) then you can use them (note : we are not import them just using them)
eg. if i want to import a class temp.class
(which is in a default package) located at Home/files/temp.class
into my program use.java
then just set the CLASSPATH
while compiling it
you can do that in two ways : permanent set OR temporary set (Not using technical terms )
permanent set : by setting the CLASSPATH (which is an environment variable) variable (different methods to do that for different OS's) -> for mac - - > export CLASSPATH=Home/files/
in this method the CLASSPATH environment variable is set till your terminal
is open
so in this case :
export CLASSPATH=Home/files/
javac use.java
java use
temporary set : in this method we use either of two option provided for both java and javac (java compiler) tool and they are -classpath
and -cp
(both these do the same job, its just -cp
is short for the -classpath
), in this method of setting classpath for the other files the main difference is that in this type the address(path) of the file is set only for the time period while that command (operation) is executing
as soon as the statement execution complete the value of CLASSPATH(the environment) -> again reaches to the same path as it was earlier,
Note: by default the CLASSPATH is . (i.e. representing the same directory)
And in this case :
java -cp .:Home/files use.java // Note: don't forget . and : is for separating the different paths
java use
Hope it helped :)
It means that if a class is defined in the default package (meaning it doesn't have any package definition), then you can't import it's static methods in another class. So the following code wouldn't work:
// Example1.java
public class Example1 {
public static void example1() {
System.out.println("Example1");
}
}
// Example2.java
import static Example1.*; // THIS IMPORT FAILS
public class Example2 {
public static void main(String... args) {
example1();
}
}
The import fails because you can't import static methods from a class that's in the default package, which is the case for Example1. In fact, you can't even use a non-static import.
This bug report has some discussion about why Java acts this way, and it was eventually closed as "not a defect" -- it's the way Java was designed to behave. Default package just has some unexpected behavior, and this is one of the reasons why programmers are encouraged to never used the default package.