Util Package

Q1:

What is the Collections API?

A:

The Collections API is a set of classes and interfaces

that support operations on collections of objects.





2:

What is the List interface?



A:

The List interface provides support for ordered

collections of objects.









Q3:

What is the Vector class?

A:

The Vector class provides the capability

to implement a growable array of objects.



Q4:

What is an Iterator interface?

A:

The Iterator interface is used to step

through the elements of a Collection .





Q5:

Which java.util classes and interfaces support

event handling?

A:

The EventObject class and the

EventListener interface support event processing.



Q6:

What is the GregorianCalendar class?

A:

The GregorianCalendar provides

support for traditional Western calendars



Q7:

What is the Locale class?

A:

The Locale class is used to tailor

program output to the conventions of a

particular geographic, political, or cultural region .


Q8:

What is the SimpleTimeZone class?

A:

The SimpleTimeZone class provides

support for a Gregorian calendar .



Q9:

What is the Map interface?

A:

The Map interface replaces the JDK 1.1

Dictionary class and is used associate keys with values.




Q10:

What is the highest-level event class of the

event-delegation model?

A:

The java.util.EventObject class is the h

ighest-level class in the event-delegation

class hierarchy.



Q11:

What is the Collection interface?

A:

The Collection interface provides support

for the implementation of a mathematical bag -

an unordered collection of objects

that may contain duplicates.



Q12:

What is the Set interface?

A:

The Set interface provides methods for

accessing the elements of a finite mathematical set.

Sets do not allow duplicate elements.


Q13:

What is the typical use of Hashtable?

A:

Whenever a program wants to store a

key value pair, one can use Hashtable.



Q14:

I am trying to store an object using a key

in a Hashtable.And some other object

already exists in that location, then what

will happen? The existing object will be

overwritten? Or the new object will be stored elsewhere?

A:

The existing object will be overwritten and thus

it will be lost.



Q15:

What is the difference between the size and capacity

of a Vector?

A:

The size is the number of elements actually

stored in the vector, while capacity is the

maximum number of elements it can store at a

given instance of time.



Q16:

Can a vector contain heterogenous objects?

A:

Yes a Vector can contain heterogenous objects.

Because a Vector stores everything in terms of Object.



Q17:

Can a ArrayList contain heterogenous objects?

A:

Yes a ArrayList can contain heterogenous objects.

Because a ArrayList stores everything in terms of Object.



Q18:

What is an enumeration?

A:

An enumeration is an interface containing methods for

accessing the underlying data structure from which the

enumeration is obtained. It is a construct which collection

classes return when you request a collection of all the

objects stored in the collection. It allows sequential access

to all the elements stored in the collection.


Q19:

Considering the basic properties of Vector and ArrayList,

where will you use Vector and where will you use ArrayList?

A:

The basic difference between a Vector and an ArrayList is

that, vector is synchronized while ArrayList is not. Thus

whenever there is a possibility of multiple threads accessing

the same instance, one should use Vector. While if not

multiple threads are going to access the same instance

then use ArrayList. Non synchronized data structure

will give better performance than the synchronized one.



Q20:

Can a vector contain heterogenous objects?

A:

Yes a Vector can contain heterogenous objects.

Because a Vector stores everything in terms of Object.





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