Trail: Essential Java Classes
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Lesson: Accessing System Resources
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Using the System Class
Unlike most other classes, you don't instantiate the System class to
use it. To be more precise, you cannot instantiate the System class--it's
a final class and all of its constructors are private.
All of System's variables and methods are class variables and class
methods--they are declared static.
For a complete discussion about class variables and class methods and how they differ from instance
variables and instance methods, refer to
Instance and Class Members in the Objects, Classes, and Interfaces
lesson.
To use a class variable, you use it directly from the name of the class
using Java's dot (.) notation. For example, to reference the System's
class variable out, you append the variable name
to the class name separated by a period, like this:
System.out
You call class methods in a similar fashion. For example, to call System's
getProperty method, you append the method name to the end of the
class name separated by a period:
System.getProperty(argument);
The following small Java program uses the System class twice, first to
retrieve the current user's name and then to display it.
class UserNameTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String name;
name = System.getProperty("user.name");
System.out.println(name);
}
}
You'll notice that the program never instantiates
a System object. It just references the getProperty method
and the out variable directly from the class.
The code sample use System's getProperty method to
search the properties database for the property called "user.name."
System Properties later in this lesson talks
more about system properties and the getProperty method.
The code sample also uses System.out, a PrintStream that implements the standard
output stream. The println method prints its
argument to the standard output stream. The next page of this
lesson discusses the standard output stream and the other two standard
I/O streams provided by the System class.
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