7.7. The this Reference
The this keyword allows you to specify the current object, whatever it might be. This obviates the need to store a separate copy of every variable and method for each instantiation of a class. The this reference always refers to the current object. Let's say it another way. When writing this.name, this refers to the current object's copy of name.
When you invoke a new object method from the same object, there is no need to prefix a this reference. The this reference is included implicitly by Java:
public class Test { void someMethod() { anotherMethod(); } void anotherMethod() { // method definition here... } }
In the above code, anotherMethod is invoked without an object reference. This code would compile because when ...
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