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java - Behavior of String literals is confusing

The behavior of String literals is very confusing in the code below.

I can understand line 1, line 2, and line 3 are true, but why is line 4 false?

When I print the hashcode of both they are the same.

class Hello
{
   public static void main(String[] args)
   {
      String hello = "Hello", lo = "lo";
      System.out.print((Other1.hello == hello) + " ");     //line 1
      System.out.print((Other1.hello == "Hello") + " ");   //line 2
      System.out.print((hello == ("Hel"+"lo")) + " ");       //line 3
      System.out.print((hello == ("Hel"+lo)) + " ");         //line 4
      System.out.println(hello == ("Hel"+lo).intern());      //line 5
      System.out.println(("Hel"+lo).hashCode());   //hashcode is 69609650 (machine depedent)
      System.out.println("Hello".hashCode());       //hashcode is same WHY ??.
   }
}

class Other1 { static String hello = "Hello"; }

I know that == checks for reference equality and check in the pool for literals. I know equals() is the right way. I want to understand the concept.

I already checked this question, but it doesn't explain clearly.

I would appreciate a complete explanation.

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Every compile-time constant expression that is of type String will be put into the String pool.

Essentially that means: if the compiler can (easily) "calculate" the value of the String without running the program, then it will be put into the pool (the rules are slightly more complicated than that and have a few corner cases, see the link above for all the details).

That's true for all the Strings in lines 1-3.

"Hel"+lo is not a compile-time constant expression, because lo is a non-constant variable.

The hash codes are the same, because the hashCode of a String depends only on its content. That's required by the contract of equals() and hashCode().


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