How to Count Number of Instances of a Class

牧云@^-^@ 提交于 2019-11-30 06:48:08

问题


Can anyone tell me how to count the number of instances of a class?

Here's my code

public class Bicycle {

    //instance variables
    public int gear, speed, seatHeight;
    public String color;

    //constructor
    public Bicycle(int gear, int speed, int seatHeight, String color) {
        gear = 0;
        speed = 0;
        seatHeight = 0;
        color ="Unknown";      
    }

    //getters and setters
    public int getGear() {
        return gear;
    }
    public void setGear(int Gear) {
        this.gear = Gear;
    }

    public int getSpeed() {
        return speed;
    }
    public void setSpeed(int Speed){
        this.speed = Speed;
    }

    public int getSeatHeight() {
        return seatHeight;
    }
    public void setSeatHeight(int SeatHeight) {
        this.seatHeight = SeatHeight;
    }

    public String getColor() {
        return color;
    }
    public void setColor(String Color) {
        this.color = Color;
    }

 }//end class



public class Variable extends Bicycle {

    public Variable(int gear, int speed, int seatHeight, String color) {
        super(gear, speed, seatHeight, color);

    }

}//end class


public class Tester {

    public static void main(String args[]){


       Bicycle bicycle1 = new Bicycle(0, 0, 0, null);
       bicycle1.setColor("red");
       System.out.println("Color: "+bicycle1.getColor());
       bicycle1.setSeatHeight(4);
       System.out.println("Seat Height: "+bicycle1.getSeatHeight());
       bicycle1.setSpeed(10);
       System.out.println("Speed: "+bicycle1.getSpeed());
       bicycle1.setGear(6);
       System.out.println("Gear: "+bicycle1.getGear());

       System.out.println("");//space

       Bicycle bicycle2 = new Bicycle(0, 0, 0, null);
       bicycle2.setColor("black");
       System.out.println("Color: "+bicycle2.getColor());
       bicycle2.setSeatHeight(6);
       System.out.println("Seat Height: "+bicycle2.getSeatHeight());
       bicycle2.setSpeed(12);
       System.out.println("Speed: "+bicycle2.getSpeed());
       bicycle2.setGear(6);
       System.out.println("Gear: "+bicycle2.getGear());

       System.out.println("");//space

    }//end method
 }//end class

The class variable is to be used to keep count of the number of instances of the Bicycle class created and the tester class creates a number of instances of the Bicycle class and demonstrates the workings of the Bicycle class and the class variable. I've looked all over the internet and I can't seem to find anything, could someone show me how to do it please, thanks in advance :)


回答1:


Since static variables initialized only once, and they're shared between all instances, you can:

class MyClass {

    private static int counter;

    public MyClass() {
        //...
        counter++;
    }

    public static int getNumOfInstances() {
        return counter;
    }
}

Read more about static fields in the JLS - 8.3.1.1. static Fields:

If a field is declared static, there exists exactly one incarnation of the field, no matter how many instances (possibly zero) of the class may eventually be created. A static field, sometimes called a class variable, is incarnated when the class is initialized (§12.4).

Note that counter is implicitly set to zero




回答2:


Pleae try the tool of java

jmap -histo <PDID>

Out put

     num     #instances         #bytes  class name
----------------------------------------------
   1:       1105141       97252408  java.lang.reflect.Method
   2:       3603562       86485488  java.lang.Double
   3:       1191098       28586352  java.lang.String
   4:        191694       27035744  [C



回答3:


In addition, you should override finalize method to decrement the counter

public class Bicycle {
...
    public static int instances = 0;

    {
        ++instances; //separate counting from constructor
    }
...
    public Bicycle(int gear, int speed, int seatHeight, String color) {
        gear = 0;
        speed = 0;
        seatHeight = 0;
        color ="Unknown";
    }

    @Override
    protected void finalize() {
        super.finalize();
        --instances;
    }

}

You should have in mind that static variables are CLASS scoped (there is no one for each instance, only one per class)

Then, you could demonstrate instance decrement with:

...
System.out.println("Count:" + Bicycle.getNumOfInstances()); // 2
bicycle1 = null;
bicycle2 = null;
System.gc(); // not guaranteed to collect but it will in this case
Thread.sleep(2000); // you expect to check again after some time
System.out.println("Count again:" + Bicycle.getNumOfInstances()); // 0



回答4:


why not using a static counter?

public class Bicycle {

    private static int instanceCounter = 0;

    //instance variables
    public int gear, speed, seatHeight;
    public String color;

    //constructor
    public Bicycle(int gear, int speed, int seatHeight, String color) {
        gear = 0;
        speed = 0;
        seatHeight = 0;
        color ="Unknown";      
instanceCounter++;
    }

    public int countInstances(){
        return instanceCounter;
    }

........



回答5:


One basic approach is to declare a static numeric member field thats incremented each time the constructor is invoked.

public class Bicycle {

    //instance variables
    public int gear, speed, seatHeight;
    public String color;
    public static int bicycleCount = 0;

    //constructor
    public Bicycle(int gear, int speed, int seatHeight, String color) {
        gear = 0;
        speed = 0;
        seatHeight = 0;
        color ="Unknown";
        bicycleCount++;      
    }
    ...
  }



回答6:


You just need static counter in class.

public class Bicycle {
    private static volatile int instanceCounter;

    public Bicycle() {
        instanceConter++; 
    }

    public static int getNumOfInstances() {
        return instanceCounter;
    }

    protected void finalize() {
        instanceCounter--;
    }
}

As mentioned in many comments finalize() is not recommended to use so there could be another approach to count the Bicycle instances -

public class Bicycle {

    private static final List<PhantomReference<Bicycle>> phantomReferences = new LinkedList<PhantomReference<Bicycle>>();
    private static final ReferenceQueue<Bicycle> referenceQueue = new ReferenceQueue<Bicycle>();
    private static final Object lock = new Object();
    private static volatile int counter;
    private static final Runnable referenceCleaner = new Runnable() {
        public void run() {
            while (true) {
                try {
                    cleanReferences();
                } catch (Exception e) {
                    e.printStackTrace();
                }
            }
        }
    };

    static {
        Thread t = new Thread(referenceCleaner);
        t.setDaemon(true);
        t.start();
    }

    private Bicycle() {
    }

    public static Bicycle getNewBicycle() {
        Bicycle bicycle = new Bicycle();
        counter++;
        synchronized (lock) {
            phantomReferences.add(new PhantomReference<Bicycle>(new Bicycle(), referenceQueue));
        }
        System.out.println("Bicycle added to heap, count: " + counter);
        return bicycle;
    }

    private static void cleanReferences() {
        try {
            PhantomReference reference = (PhantomReference) referenceQueue.remove();
            counter--;
            synchronized (lock) {
                phantomReferences.remove(reference);
            }
            System.out.println("Bicycle removed from heap, count: " + counter);
        } catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }

    public static int getNumOfBicycles() {
        return counter;
    }
}

public class BicycleTest {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        int i = 0;
        while (i++ < 1000) {
            Bicycle.getNewBicycle();
        }
        while (Bicycle.getNumOfBicycles() > 0) {
            try {
                Thread.sleep(1000);
                System.gc(); // just a request
            } catch (Exception e) {
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    }
}



回答7:


Alternatively, you can create a counter with an initializer block and a static variable.

class SomeClass
{
    static int counter;
    {
         counter++;
    }
}

Initializer blocks get copied by the compiler into every constructor, so, you will have to write it once no matter how many constructors you will need (As referred into the above link). The block in {} runs every time you create a new object of the class and increases the variable counter by one. And of course get the counter by something like:

public int getCounter()
{
    return counter;
}

or directly

int numOfInstances = SomeClass.counter;



回答8:


public class Number_Objects {

    static int count=0;
    Number_Objects(){
        count++;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Number_Objects ob1=new Number_Objects();
        Number_Objects ob2=new Number_Objects();
        Number_Objects obj3=new Number_Objects();
        System.out.print("Number of objects created :"+count);
    }

}


来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28947571/how-to-count-number-of-instances-of-a-class

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