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java - What happens if we override only hashCode() in a class and use it in a Set?

This may not be the real world scenario but just curious to know what happens, below is the code.

I am creating a set of object of class UsingSet. According to hashing concept in Java, when I first add object which contains "a", it will create a bucket with hashcode 97 and put the object inside it. Again when it encounters an object with "a", it will call the overridden hashcode method in the class UsingSet and it will get hashcode 97 so what is next?

As I have not overridden equals method, the default implementation will return false. So where will be the Object with value "a" be kept, in the same bucket where the previous object with hashcode 97 kept? or will it create new bucket? anybody know how it will be stored internally?

/* package whatever; // don't place package name! */

import java.util.*;
import java.lang.*;
import java.io.*;

class UsingSet {  

  String value;  

  public UsingSet(String value){  
    this.value = value;  
  }  

  public String toString() {  
    return value;  
  }  

  public int hashCode() {  
    int hash = value.hashCode();  
    System.out.println("hashcode called" + hash);  
    return hash;  
  }  

  public static void main(String args[]) {  

    java.util.Set s = new java.util.HashSet();  

    s.add(new UsingSet("A"));  
    s.add(new UsingSet("b"));  
    s.add(new UsingSet("a"));  
    s.add(new UsingSet("b"));   
    s.add(new UsingSet("a"));  

    s.add(new Integer(1));  
    s.add(new Integer(1));  

    System.out.println("s = " + s); 

  }  
}  

output is:

hashcode called65
hashcode called98
hashcode called97
hashcode called98
hashcode called97
s = [1, b, b, A, a, a]
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HashCode & Equals methods

  1. Only Override HashCode, Use the default Equals: Only the references to the same object will return true. In other words, those objects you expected to be equal will not be equal by calling the equals method.
  2. Only Override Equals, Use the default HashCode: There might be duplicates in the HashMap or HashSet. We write the equals method and expect{"abc", "ABC"} to be equals. However, when using a HashMap, they might appear in different buckets, thus the contains() method will not detect them each other.

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