🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Variables in Java ☕ 🔹 What is a Variable? A variable is a container used to store data values in a program. Each variable has a name, type, and value. 📌 Types of Variables in Java: ✅ Local Variables - Declared inside methods, constructors, or blocks - Accessible only within that scope - Must be initialized before use ✅ Instance Variables - Declared inside a class but outside methods - Belong to objects - Each object has its own copy ✅ Static Variables - Declared using "static" keyword - Shared among all objects of the class - Memory allocated only once 💡 Example: "int age = 21;" "String name = "Java";" 🎯 Key Takeaway: Variables are the basic building blocks of any Java program used to store and manage data efficiently. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #Variables #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
Java Variables: Local, Instance, Static Explained
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Instance, Static, and Local Variables in Java ☕ 🔹 Local Variables - Declared inside methods, constructors, or blocks - Accessible only within that specific scope - Must be initialized before use - Stored in stack memory 🔹 Instance Variables - Declared inside a class but outside methods - Belong to each object of the class - Each object has its own copy - Stored in heap memory 🔹 Static Variables - Declared using the "static" keyword - Shared among all objects of the class - Only one copy exists - Stored in method area 💡 Example: class Demo { int instanceVar = 10; // Instance variable static int staticVar = 20; // Static variable void display() { int localVar = 5; // Local variable System.out.println(localVar); } } 🎯 Key Takeaway: Understanding variable types helps in writing efficient and optimized Java programs by managing memory and scope effectively. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #Variables #OOP #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Ways to Initialize an Object in Java ☕ 🔹 Object initialization means assigning values to the instance variables of an object. 📌 Ways to Initialize an Object: ✅ 1. Using Reference Variable - Values are assigned after object creation class Student { int id; String name; } Student s = new Student(); s.id = 101; s.name = "Java"; --- ✅ 2. Using Method - Values are initialized using a method class Student { int id; String name; void setData(int i, String n) { id = i; name = n; } } --- ✅ 3. Using Constructor - Values are assigned at the time of object creation class Student { int id; String name; Student(int i, String n) { id = i; name = n; } } --- 🎯 Key Takeaway: Objects can be initialized in multiple ways, but using constructors is the most efficient and commonly used approach. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #OOP #Constructors #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored the "this" keyword in Java ☕ 🔹 What is "this" keyword? "this" is a reference variable that refers to the current object of a class. It is used to access instance variables and methods of the current object. 📌 Uses of "this" keyword: ✅ 1. To refer instance variables - Used when local variables or parameters have the same name (avoids shadowing) class Student { int id; Student(int id) { this.id = id; } } --- ✅ 2. To call current class methods void display() { this.show(); } --- ✅ 3. To invoke current class constructor Student() { this(100, "Java"); } --- ✅ 4. To pass current object as argument method(this); --- 🎯 Key Takeaway: "this" keyword helps in clearly referring to the current object and avoids confusion between instance and local variables. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #ThisKeyword #OOP #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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Learning Priority Queue in Java Recently, I explored the concept of Priority Queue in Java, and it gave me a strong understanding of how efficient data handling works when priority matters over order. 🔹 Why Priority Queue? Unlike normal queues (FIFO), a Priority Queue processes elements based on their priority (min or max), which makes it extremely useful in scenarios like scheduling, real-time systems, and optimization problems. 🔹 Key Learnings: How Priority Queue is implemented using a heap (min-heap by default) Syntax and basic operations in Java Time complexity for insertion and deletion: O(log n) How ordering works internally without full sorting 🔹 Java Syntax Example: PriorityQueue<Integer> pq = new PriorityQueue<>(); pq.add(10); pq.add(5); pq.add(20); System.out.println(pq.peek()); // Smallest element pq.poll(); // Removes smallest element 🔹 Problems I Practiced: ✔️ Kth Smallest Element ✔️ Kth Largest Element These problems helped me understand how to use min-heap and max-heap effectively to optimize performance instead of sorting the entire array. 💡 Takeaway: Priority Queue is a powerful tool when you need efficient access to the smallest or largest element without sorting everything. Looking forward to applying this in more real-world problems and system design scenarios! 💻🔥 big thanks to Pratyush Narain #Java #DataStructures #PriorityQueue #DSA #Learning #CodingJourney
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Constructor Overloading in Java ☕ 🔹 What is Constructor Overloading? Constructor overloading means having multiple constructors in the same class with different parameter lists (different number, type, or order of parameters). 📌 Why use Constructor Overloading? ✅ Allows creating objects in different ways ✅ Provides flexibility in initialization ✅ Improves code readability and reusability 📌 Example: class Student { int id; String name; Student() { // No-argument constructor id = 0; name = "Default"; } Student(int id) { // Constructor with one parameter this.id = id; } Student(int id, String name) { // Constructor with two parameters this.id = id; this.name = name; } } 💡 Each constructor is called based on the arguments passed during object creation. 🎯 Key Takeaway: Constructor overloading helps in initializing objects in multiple ways, making programs more flexible and efficient. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #ConstructorOverloading #OOP #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored How to Write Package Statement in Java ☕ 🔹 What is a Package Statement? A package statement is used to define the package (namespace) in which a class belongs. It helps organize classes into a structured hierarchy. 📌 Syntax of Package Statement: package package_name; 👉 It must be the first statement in a Java file (before any import or class declaration). --- 📌 Example: package com.myapp; public class Demo { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello Package"); } } --- 📌 Key Rules: ✅ Package statement should be written at the top of the file ✅ Only one package statement is allowed per file ✅ Package name should follow naming conventions (lowercase, reverse domain like "com.company") --- 📌 Compile & Run: javac -d . Demo.java java com.myapp.Demo --- 🎯 Key Takeaway: The package statement defines the location of a class and helps in organizing Java programs into a clean and maintainable structure. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #Packages #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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Day 58/200 - Java Learning Journey 🌱 ✨ Sharing what I learned today in Java. 📚 Today I learned about Encapsulation in Java Today's Topic: Encapsulation ✴️ Encapsulation: 👉 It means wrapping(hiding) the data (variables,methods) and providing the controlled access. 🔯 Advantages/Features: 🔺 Security 🔺 Hiding the data 🔺 Controlled access 🔺 Validation 🔺 Flexibility 🔆 How to hide the data ❓ ▪️ By making those variables,methods to be private. 1️⃣ Setters: 👉 These are used to set the data. 2️⃣ Getters: 👉 Get or return the data. 🔸 Syntax: For setters: access_modifier returntype(void) settersName(){ -------------//data } For getters: access_modifier returntype gettersName(){ return value; } 💠 Without setters we cant use getters. 💠 Without getters we can set the value by using setters. 👎 Drawback: 👉 In Encapsulation for each and every variables we need to use setters to set the value to those variables. #Java#Encapsulation#OOPS#DailyLearning#Consistency#Meghana M#10000 Coders#
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🚀 Java Collections Framework & ArrayList – Simple Notes While learning Java, I explored the Collections Framework and understood how it helps in storing and managing data efficiently. 🔹 What is Collections Framework? It is a group of classes and interfaces used to store, manipulate, and process data easily. 🔹 Why it was introduced? Earlier, we used arrays which had many limitations (fixed size, difficult operations). To overcome this, Java introduced Collections. 📌 Common Interfaces & Classes - List → ArrayList, LinkedList - Set → HashSet, TreeSet - Queue → Deque - Map → HashMap 💡 What is ArrayList? - A resizable (dynamic) array - Stores objects (not primitive data types) - Allows duplicate values - Maintains insertion order - Allows null values ⚙️ Constructors of ArrayList - "ArrayList()" → default - "ArrayList(int capacity)" → with initial size - "ArrayList(Collection c)" → from another collection 📈 Capacity Concept - Default capacity = 10 - When full, it increases using: 👉 "(current size × 3/2) + 1" 🔁 Ways to Access Elements 1. For loop 2. For-each loop 3. Iterator (forward only) 4. ListIterator (forward & backward) 🛠️ Important Methods - "add()" → add element - "add(index, value)" → add at position - "get()" → access element - "set()" → update value - "remove()" → delete element - "size()" → number of elements - "isEmpty()" → check empty or not - "contains()" → check element - "indexOf()" / "lastIndexOf()" → find position - "clear()" → remove all - "subList()" → get part of list - "trimToSize()" → reduce memory 📌 When to Use ArrayList? ✔ When you need dynamic size ✔ When duplicates are allowed ✔ When order matters ✔ When frequent read operations are needed ✨ In short: ArrayList makes data handling easy, flexible, and efficient compared to traditional arrays. #Java #Collections #ArrayList #Programming #Learning #CodingJourney
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Types of Constructors in Java (In Depth) ☕ 🔹 Constructors are special methods used to initialize objects when they are created. They help in setting up the initial state of an object. 📌 1️⃣ Default Constructor (Implicit) - Provided automatically by Java if no constructor is defined - Does not take any parameters - Initializes instance variables with default values: - "int → 0" - "boolean → false" - "char → '\u0000'" - "reference types → null" - Mainly used for basic object creation without custom initialization 💡 Example: class Student { int id; String name; } 👉 Here, Java internally provides a default constructor --- 📌 2️⃣ No-Argument Constructor (Explicit) - Defined by the programmer without parameters - Used to assign custom default values instead of Java defaults - Improves control over object initialization 💡 Example: class Student { int id; String name; Student() { id = 100; name = "Default"; } } --- 📌 3️⃣ Parameterized Constructor - Accepts parameters to initialize variables - Allows different objects to have different values - Helps in making code more flexible and reusable 💡 Example: class Student { int id; String name; Student(int id, String name) { this.id = id; this.name = name; } } --- 🎯 Key Takeaway: - Default constructor → Automatic initialization - No-argument constructor → Custom default values - Parameterized constructor → Dynamic initialization Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #Constructors #OOP #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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🚀 Core Java Learning Journey Explored Explicit and Implicit Packages in Java ☕ 🔹 Implicit Package (Default Package) - When no package statement is written, the class belongs to the default (unnamed) package - Java automatically places the class in this package - Suitable for small programs or beginners 📌 Example: class Demo { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Default Package"); } } 👉 No "package" statement → implicit/default package --- 🔹 Explicit Package - Created by the programmer using the "package" keyword - Helps organize classes into a proper structure - Used in real-world applications 📌 Example: package com.myapp; public class Demo { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Explicit Package"); } } --- 📌 Key Differences: ✅ Implicit → No package statement, simple usage ✅ Explicit → Defined using "package", better organization ✅ Implicit → Not suitable for large projects ✅ Explicit → Preferred for scalable applications --- 🎯 Key Takeaway: Explicit packages provide better structure and scalability, while implicit packages are mainly used for simple or beginner-level programs. Learning and growing at Dhee Coding Lab 💻 #Java #CoreJava #Packages #Programming #LearningJourney #FullStackDevelopment
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