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What is a NullPointerException?
According To Java Docs: Thrown when an application attempts to use null in a case where an object is required. These include: Calling the instance method of a null object. Accessing or modifying the field of a null object. Taking the length of null as if it were an array. Accessing or modifying theRead more
According To Java Docs:
It is also the case that if you attempt to use a null reference with
synchronized, that will also throw this exception.Otherwise, if the value of the Expression is null, a
NullPointerExceptionis thrown.There are two overarching types of variables in Java:
intorcharare primitives.Objecti.e. variables that refer to anObject. If you want to manipulate theObjectthat a reference variable refers to you must dereference it. Dereferencing usually entails using.to access a method or field, or using[to index an array. By convention reference types are usually denoted with a type that starts in uppercase. For example variables of typeObjectare references.Consider the following code where you declare a variable of primitive type
intand don’t initialize it:These two lines will crash the program because no value is specified for
xand we are trying to usex‘s value to specifyy. All primitives have to be initialized to a usable value before they are manipulated.Now here is where things get interesting. Reference variables can be set to
nullwhich means “I am referencing nothing“. You can get anullvalue in a reference variable if you explicitly set it that way, or a reference variable is uninitialized and the compiler does not catch it (Java will automatically set the variable tonull).If a reference variable is set to null either explicitly by you or through Java automatically, and you attempt to dereference it you get a
NullPointerException.The
NullPointerException(NPE) typically occurs when you declare a variable but did not create an object and assign it to the variable before trying to use the contents of the variable. So you have a reference to something that does not actually exist.Take the following code:
The first line declares a variable named
num, but it does not actually contain a reference value yet. Since you have not yet said what to point to, Java sets it tonull.In the second line, the
newkeyword is used to instantiate (or create) an object of typeInteger, and the reference variablenumis assigned to thatIntegerobject.If you attempt to dereference
numbefore creating the object you get aNullPointerException. In the most trivial cases, the compiler will catch the problem and let you know that “num may not have been initialized,” but sometimes you may write code that does not directly create the object.For instance, you may have a method as follows:
In which case, you are not creating the object
obj, but rather assuming that it was created before thedoSomething()method was called. Note, it is possible to call the method like this:In which case,
objisnull, and the statementobj.myMethod()will throw aNullPointerException.If the method is intended to do something to the passed-in object as the above method does, it is appropriate to throw the
NullPointerExceptionbecause it’s a programmer error and the programmer will need that information for debugging purposes.In addition to
NullPointerExceptions thrown as a result of the method’s logic, you can also check the method arguments fornullvalues and throw NPEs explicitly by adding something like the following near the beginning of a method:Note that it’s helpful to say in your error message clearly which object cannot be
null. The advantage of validating this is that 1) you can return your own clearer error messages and 2) for the rest of the method you know that unlessobjis reassigned, it is not null and can be dereferenced safely.Alternatively, there may be cases where the purpose of the method is not solely to operate on the passed in object, and therefore a null parameter may be acceptable. In this case, you would need to check for a null parameter and behave differently. You should also explain this in the documentation. For example,
doSomething()could be written as:Now Java 14 has added a new language feature to show the root cause of NullPointerException. This language feature has been part of SAP commercial JVM since 2006.
In Java 14, the following is a sample NullPointerException Exception message:
List of situations that cause a
NullPointerExceptionto occurHere are all the situations in which a
NullPointerExceptionoccurs, that are directly* mentioned by the Java Language Specification:throw null;synchronized (someNullReference) { ... }NullPointerExceptionif one of its operands is a boxed null referenceNullPointerExceptionif the boxed value is null.superon a null reference throws aNullPointerException. If you are confused, this is talking about qualified superclass constructor invocations:for (element : iterable)loop to loop through a null collection/array.switch (foo) { ... }(whether its an expression or statement) can throw aNullPointerExceptionwhenfoois null.foo.new SomeInnerClass()throws aNullPointerExceptionwhenfoois null.name1::name2orprimaryExpression::namethrows aNullPointerExceptionwhen evaluated whenname1orprimaryExpressionevaluates to null.A note from the JLS here says that,
See lesssomeInstance.someStaticMethod()doesn’t throw an NPE, becausesomeStaticMethodis static, butsomeInstance::someStaticMethodstill throw an NPE!