Day 22-What I Learned In a Day(JAVA) Today I learned about method calling in Java. I practiced how a method can be called multiple times from the main() method. I also understood that when calling a method, we can pass arguments in two ways: 1️⃣ Directly passing values m1(10); 2️⃣ Passing values through a variable int a = 10; m1(a); Both approaches will pass the value to the method parameter and execute the method. Through this practice, I improved my understanding of method creation, parameter passing, and method execution flow in Java. Hashtags Practiced 👇 #Java #CoreJava #JavaLearning #Programming #CodingJourney #JavaMethods #LearnJava #Developers #TechLearning #DailyLearning
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Day 28 -What I Learned in a Day(JAVA) Today I started learning Looping Statements in Java. Loops are used to execute a block of code repeatedly until a certain condition becomes false. They help reduce code repetition and make programs more efficient. In Java, there are mainly three types of loops: • while loop • do-while loop • for loop Today I focused on the while loop. 🔹 What is a While Loop? A while loop executes a block of code repeatedly as long as the condition is true. The condition is checked before the loop executes, so if the condition is false initially, the loop will not run. Syntax of While Loop: initialization; while(condition) { // statements increment / decrement; } What I Practiced Today: ✔ Practiced 3 basic while loop programs ✔ Built a calculator program using while loop and switch statement ✔ Learned how loops control program flow and reduce repetitive code Every day I’m taking small steps to improve my Java programming skills and strengthen my understanding of core concepts. Practiced 👇 #Java #JavaLearning #Programming #CodingJourney #Loops #WhileLoop
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🚀 Day 25 of My Java Learning Journey Today I learned about the Object Class in Java and its important methods. 🔹 The Object class is the parent of all classes in Java. 🔹 toString() is used to convert an object into a readable string format. 🔹 clone() is used to create a copy of an object. 🔹 Java is not a purely object-oriented language because it uses primitive data types like int, char, and float. 🔹 Wrapper classes such as Integer, Double, and Character help convert primitive types into objects. Example: Employee e = new Employee(); System.out.println(e); Internally, Java calls: e.toString(); Every day I am improving my Java skills step by step 💪 Consistency + Practice = Growth 📈 #Java #ObjectOrientedProgramming #Programming #LearningJourney #100DaysOfCode #SoftwareDevelopment
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#Day_13 of My Java Learning Journey – Writing Functions in Java Today I practiced how to create functions (methods) in Java, and I built a simple program to check whether a number is Even or Odd. 🔥 What I learned today: ✔ How to create a boolean function ✔ How to use if-else conditions inside a method ✔ How to return true/false ✔ How to call a method inside the main() function ✔ How to print the result in the console 🧩 Example I worked on: I created a method IfEven(int a) that: Prints whether the number is Even or Odd Returns a boolean value (true for even, false for odd) This helped me understand functions more clearly and how they improve code structure and reusability. #Java #LearningJourney #100DaysOfCode #Coding #Developer #JavaBeginners #OOP #CodeNewbie
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Today I strengthened my understanding of how Java programs actually execute 🚀☕ Here’s what I learned step by step: ✔ The file name must match the public class name 📄 ✔ The main() method can be inside any class, not only the public class 🔍 ✔ Only one public class is allowed in one ".java" file ⚠️ ✔ Protected members outside the package are accessible through inheritance — 🔹 Non-static → accessed using child class object 🔹 Static → accessed using child class name or parent class name inside child class 👨👦✨ ✔ The JVM first loads the class that contains main(), then loads other required classes when needed 🧠 Understanding these core execution rules is helping me build stronger clarity in Java inheritance and access modifiers 💻📚 #Java #Programming #LearningJourney #OOP #JavaDeveloper #BackendDevelopment 🚀
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☕ Java Output Methods Explained – print() vs println() vs \n When learning Java programming, understanding how output works is very important. In the example program, three different output methods are used: 📌 What happens here? ✔ println() → Prints the text and moves the cursor to the next line ✔ print() → Prints the text but stays on the same line ✔ \n → Creates a manual line break (newline character) 💡 Output of this program: Hello World! Hello JishanHii Jishan Because print() does not move to the next line, the second and third outputs appear on the same line. Understanding these small details is essential when learning Java fundamentals and writing clean console output. 🚀 Every Java developer starts with simple programs like this before building large applications. 👉 Question for developers: Do you prefer using println() or \n for line breaks in Java? #Java #JavaProgramming #Coding #Programming #SoftwareDevelopment #BackendDevelopment #JavaDeveloper #LearnJava #ComputerScience #CodingTips
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💡 Java Strings Decoded: Memory, Mutability & Logic Ever wondered what really happens when we create a String in Java? 🤔 Here’s a quick breakdown of the concept I explored today: 🔹 Strings are immutable – once created, their value cannot be changed. Any modification creates a new object. 🔹 String Constant Pool (SCP) helps optimize memory by storing only one copy of identical string literals. 🔹 Using new String("Java") creates a new object in the heap, even if the same value already exists in the pool. 🔹 == compares memory addresses, while .equals() compares the actual content of strings. Understanding how Java manages strings helps us write more efficient and optimized code. Always learning, always improving 🚀 #TapAcademy #Java #JavaDeveloper #Programming #Coding #LearningInPublic #SoftwareDevelopment #FullStackDeveloper
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Today I Learned: Method Overloading in Java Today I explored one of the most important concepts in Java — Method Overloading. --> Method Overloading allows multiple methods in the same class with the same name but different parameters (type, number, or order). --> Key Points: --> JVM resolves overloaded methods using priority: Exact Match > Widening > Autoboxing > Varargs --> It is an example of Compile-Time Polymorphism --> Improves code readability and flexibility --> Changing only the return type is NOT valid overloading --> We can even overload main() and static methods #Java #Programming #Coding #Developer #100DaysOfCode #LearningJourney #Java #JavaProgramming #JavaDeveloper #SoftwareDevelopment #Programming #Coding #BackendDevelopment #TechLearning #Developers #LearnToCode #ProgrammingCommunity #100DaysOfCode #CodeNewbie #TechCareer #SoftwareEngineer
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While learning core Java concepts, I recently explored the Collection Hierarchy, and it gave me a clearer understanding of how Java manages and organizes groups of objects efficiently. The Java Collection Framework provides a set of interfaces and classes designed to store, retrieve, and manipulate data in different ways depending on the requirement. 🔹 List – Maintains insertion order and allows duplicate elements. Examples: ArrayList, LinkedList, Vector, Stack. 🔹 Set – Stores only unique elements and prevents duplication. Examples: HashSet, LinkedHashSet, TreeSet. 🔹 Queue – Designed for processing elements typically in FIFO (First In First Out) order. Examples: PriorityQueue, ArrayDeque. Understanding this hierarchy helps developers choose the right data structure based on ordering, uniqueness, and performance requirements. #Java #JavaCollections #SoftwareDevelopment #JavaDeveloper #Programming #Learning
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Day 34-What I Learned In a Day (JAVA) Today, I focused on pattern programming in Java, especially triangle patterns. I practiced different types of triangle patterns like: 🔹 Increasing triangle 🔹 Decreasing triangle 🔹 Right-aligned triangle 🔹 Reverse triangle Key Learnings: 🔹 Understanding how nested loops control rows and columns 🔹 Learning how to manage spaces and stars 🔹Breaking patterns into simple logic (increase & decrease) 🔹 Improving problem-solving and logical thinking Practiced 👇 #Java #Coding #PatternProgramming #LearningJourney #ProblemSolving
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Multithreading is one of the most powerful features in Java. But it’s also one of the most confusing topics when you start learning it. Concepts like thread lifecycle, synchronization, and deadlocks can feel overwhelming at first. I recently came across this Java Thread Cheat Sheet and found it really helpful as a quick reference. It summarizes important concepts like: • What a thread and process are • How to create threads (Thread class vs Runnable) • Important thread methods (start(), sleep(), join(), wait(), notify()) • Thread lifecycle and states • Synchronization and deadlocks • User threads vs daemon threads Understanding these fundamentals is essential when building high-performance backend systems or preparing for Java interviews. Sharing it here in case it helps someone revising Java multithreading basics. Which Java multithreading concept took you the longest to understand? 🤔 #Java #Multithreading #BackendDevelopment #Programming #SoftwareEngineering
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