



static keyword in java


static is a non-access modifier in Java which is applicable for the following:

blocks
variables
methods
nested classes

To create a static member(block,variable,method,nested class), precede its declaration with the keyword static. When a member is declared static, it can be accessed before any objects of its class are created, and without reference to any object. For example, in below java program, we are accessing static method m1() without creating any object of Test class.







 


 

 













// Java program to demonstrate that a static member 
// can be accessed before instantiating a class 
class Test 
{ 
    // static method 
    static void m1() 
    { 
        System.out.println("from m1"); 
    } 
  
    public static void main(String[] args) 
    { 
          // calling m1 without creating 
          // any object of class Test 
           m1(); 
    } 
} 


















Output:


from m1


Static blocks
 If you need to do computation in order to initialize your static variables, you can declare a static block that gets executed exactly once, when the class is first loaded. Consider the following java program demonstrating use of static blocks. 







 


 

 













// Java program to demonstrate use of static blocks 
class Test 
{ 
    // static variable 
    static int a = 10; 
    static int b; 
      
    // static block 
    static { 
        System.out.println("Static block initialized."); 
        b = a * 4; 
    } 
  
    public static void main(String[] args) 
    { 
       System.out.println("from main"); 
       System.out.println("Value of a : "+a); 
       System.out.println("Value of b : "+b); 
    } 
} 


















Output:


Static block initialized.

from main

Value of a : 10

Value of b : 40


For Detailed article on static blocks, see static blocks
Static variables 
When a variable is declared as static, then a single copy of variable is created and shared among all objects at class level. Static variables are, essentially, global variables. All instances of the class share the same static variable.
Important points for static variables :-

We can create static variables at class-level only. See here
static block and static variables are executed in order they are present in a program.

Below is the java program to demonstrate that static block and static variables are executed in order they are present in a program.







 


 

 













// java program to demonstrate execution 
// of static blocks and variables 
class Test 
{ 
    // static variable 
    static int a = m1(); 
      
    // static block 
    static { 
        System.out.println("Inside static block"); 
    } 
      
    // static method 
    static int m1() { 
        System.out.println("from m1"); 
        return 20; 
    } 
      
    // static method(main !!) 
    public static void main(String[] args) 
    { 
       System.out.println("Value of a : "+a); 
       System.out.println("from main"); 
    } 
  
  
} 


















Output:
from m1

Inside static block

Value of a : 20

from main


Static methods
 When a method is declared with static keyword, it is known as static method. The most common example of a static method is     main( ) method.As discussed above, Any static member can be accessed before any objects of its class are created, and without reference to any object.Methods declared as static have several restrictions:

They can only directly call other static methods.
They can only directly access static data.
They cannot refer to this or super in any way.

Below is the java program to demonstrate restrictions on static methods.







 


 

 













// java program to demonstrate restriction on static methods 
class Test 
{ 
    // static variable 
    static int a = 10; 
      
    // instance variable 
    int b = 20; 
      
    // static method 
    static void m1() 
    { 
        a = 20; 
        System.out.println("from m1"); 
          
         // Cannot make a static reference to the non-static field b 
         b = 10; // compilation error 
                  
         // Cannot make a static reference to the  
                 // non-static method m2() from the type Test 
         m2();  // compilation error 
           
         //  Cannot use super in a static context 
         System.out.println(super.a); // compiler error  
    } 
      
    // instance method 
    void m2() 
    {     
        System.out.println("from m2"); 
    } 
      
      
      
    public static void main(String[] args) 
    { 
        // main method  
    } 
} 


















When to use static variables and methods?
Use the static variable for the property that is common to all objects. For example, in class Student, all students shares the same college name. Use static methods for changing static variables.
Consider the following java program, that illustrate the use of static keyword with variables and methods.







 


 

 













// A java program to demonstrate use of 
// static keyword with methods and variables 
  
// Student class 
class Student  
{ 
    String name; 
    int rollNo; 
      
    // static variable 
    static String cllgName; 
      
    // static counter to set unique roll no 
    static int counter = 0; 
      
      
    public Student(String name)  
    { 
        this.name = name; 
          
        this.rollNo = setRollNo(); 
    } 
      
    // getting unique rollNo 
    // through static variable(counter) 
    static int setRollNo() 
    { 
        counter++; 
        return counter; 
    } 
      
    // static method 
    static void setCllg(String name){ 
        cllgName = name ; 
    } 
      
    // instance method 
    void getStudentInfo(){ 
        System.out.println("name : " + this.name); 
        System.out.println("rollNo : " + this.rollNo); 
          
        // accessing static variable 
        System.out.println("cllgName : " + cllgName); 
    } 
} 
  
//Driver class 
public class StaticDemo  
{ 
    public static void main(String[] args) 
    { 
        // calling static method 
        // without instantiating Student class 
        Student.setCllg("XYZ"); 
      
        Student s1 = new Student("Alice"); 
        Student s2 = new Student("Bob"); 
          
        s1.getStudentInfo(); 
        s2.getStudentInfo(); 
          
    } 
} 


















Output:
name : Alice

rollNo : 1

cllgName : XYZ

name : Bob

rollNo : 2

cllgName : XYZ



Static nested classes :  We can not declare top-level class with a static modifier, but can declare nested classes as static. Such type of classes are called Nested static classes. For static nested class, see  static nested class in java
This article is contributed by Gaurav Miglani. If you like GeeksforGeeks and would like to contribute, you can also write an article using contribute.geeksforgeeks.org or mail your article to contribute@geeksforgeeks.org. See your article appearing on the GeeksforGeeks main page and help other Geeks.
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