Background
All Java objects have a toString()
method, which is invoked when you try to print the object.
System.out.println(myObject); // invokes myObject.toString()
This method is defined in the Object
class (the superclass of all Java objects). The Object.toString()
method returns a fairly ugly looking string, composed of the name of the class, an @
symbol and the hashcode of the object in hexadecimal. The code for this looks like:
// Code of Object.toString() public String toString() { return getClass().getName() + "@" + Integer.toHexString(hashCode()); }
A result such as com.foo.MyType@2f92e0f4
can therefore be explained as:
com.foo.MyType
– the name of the class, i.e. the class isMyType
in the packagecom.foo
.@
– joins the string together2f92e0f4
the hashcode of the object.
The name of array classes look a little different, which is explained well in the Javadocs for Class.getName()
. For instance, [Ljava.lang.String
means:
[
– an single-dimensional array (as opposed to[[
or[[[
etc.)L
– the array contains a class or interfacejava.lang.String
– the type of objects in the array
Customizing the Output
To print something different when you call System.out.println(myObject)
, you must override the toString()
method in your own class. Here’s a simple example:
public class Person { private String name; // constructors and other methods omitted @Override public String toString() { return name; } }
Now if we print a Person
, we see their name rather than com.foo.Person@12345678
.
Bear in mind that toString()
is just one way for an object to be converted to a string. Typically this output should fully describe your object in a clear and concise manner. A better toString()
for our Person
class might be:
@Override public String toString() { return getClass().getSimpleName() + "[name=" + name + "]"; }
Which would print, e.g., Person[name=Henry]
. That’s a really useful piece of data for debugging/testing.
If you want to focus on just one aspect of your object or include a lot of jazzy formatting, you might be better to define a separate method instead, e.g. String toElegantReport() {...}
.
Auto-generating the Output
Many IDEs offer support for auto-generating a toString()
method, based on the fields in the class. See docs for Eclipse and IntelliJ, for example.
Several popular Java libraries offer this feature as well. Some examples include:
ToStringBuilder
from Apache Commons LangMoreObjects.ToStringHelper
from Google Guava@ToString
annotation from Project Lombok
Printing groups of objects
So you’ve created a nice toString()
for your class. What happens if that class is placed into an array or a collection?
Arrays
If you have an array of objects, you can call Arrays.toString()
to produce a simple representation of the contents of the array. For instance, consider this array of Person
objects:
Person[] people = { new Person("Fred"), new Person("Mike") }; System.out.println(Arrays.toString(people)); // Prints: [Fred, Mike]
Note: this is a call to a static method called toString()
in the Arrays class, which is different to what we’ve been discussing above.
If you have a multi-dimensional array, you can use Arrays.deepToString()
to achieve the same sort of output.
Collections
Most collections will produce a pretty output based on calling .toString()
on every element.
List<Person> people = new ArrayList<>(); people.add(new Person("Alice")); people.add(new Person("Bob")); System.out.println(people); // Prints [Alice, Bob]
So you just need to ensure your list elements define a nice toString()
as discussed above.