Making a method static in Java is an important decision . Though, static
keyword is one of the fundamental concepts, many times programmers gets
confused to make a particular method static or not. In Java programming, main
motivation for making a method static is convenience.
You can call a static method without creating any object, just by using it's
class name. So if you need a method, which you want to call directly by class
name, make that method static. Utility classes e.g. java.lang.Math or StringUtils, are good
examples of classes, which uses static methods. Before making a method static,
you should look into limitation of static methods as well, as you
can not override static method in Java. By keeping these properties in
mind, we can make few rules, which will help to decide when to make a method static in Java and when to use them. In this
Java article, we will learn more about benefits and limitation of making a method
static, and also see couple of examples of static methods from JDK to learn
when and how to use static method in Java.
What does static method do in Java
When you see a static method in Java code, What do you assume? What
reasoning and assumptions a reader make, when he sees a static method? This is
important to learn to ensure we are
using static method correctly.
1) Static method doesn't modify state of object. Since state of object is
maintained as instance variables, and Java doesn't allow non static variables
on static context. Modern days IDE like Netbeans also shows static
method in italics to differentiate it from other methods.
2) Static method mostly operates on arguments, almost all static method
accepts arguments, perform some calculation and return value.
Rules to make a method static in Java
There is no hard and fast, well written rules, to decide when to make a
method static or not, But there are few observations based upon experience,
which not only help to make a method static but also teaches when to use static
method in Java. You should consider making a method static in Java :
2) You want to call method without creating instance of that class.
3) A method is good candidate of being static, if it only work on
arguments provided to it e.g. public int factorial(int number){}, this
method only operate on number provided as argument.
4) Utility methods are also good candidate of being static e.g. StringUtils.isEmpty(String
text), this a utility method to check if a String is empty or not.
5) If function of method will remain static across class hierarchy e.g. equals() method is not a good
candidate of making static because every Class can redefine equality.
When to use static method in Java
Now, we know the benefits and limitation of making a method static in
Java, we can see couple of scenarios where we can use static methods. Factory
design pattern provides a good use of static method. You can use static method
to create instance of a class. Even Effective Java book advises about
using static factory method, couple of example of these in Java library is
creating thread pool from Executors class. Executors provides
lots of static methods to create different types of thread pool e.g. public
static ExecutorService newCachedThreadPool(), public static
ExecutorService newFixedThreadPool(int nThreads) etc. Another interesting
use of static methods from JDK is collection classes e.g. Collections and Arrays which
provides lot of static utility methods to operate on different kinds of
collection. Static method can also be combined with variable arguments to
create a collection of explicitly elements e.g. EnumSet.of(E first,
E... rest). Apart from these, if you loot at Apache commons lang library, you will
find a pattern of utils class e.g. StringUtils, ArrayUtils, which
provides utility methods to operate on String and
arrays. One more interesting use of static method I have seen is valueOf() method
inside different value classes e.g. java.lang.String, though
this is also an example of factory method, but it's also
a nice way to convert one type to another. For example valueOf() can also
be used to convert String to Integer in Java. In short, it make sense to use
static methods :
1) Along with creational design pattern e.g. Factory and Singleton.
2) As utility method, which operate on arguments.
3) A conversion tool e.g. valueOf().
That's all about when to make a method static in Java. We have seen
benefits and limitation of making a method static, and few examples of static
methods from JDK. JDK examples will also help you to decide when to use static
method in Java.

8 comments :
nice explanation. thanks
how marker interface works internally. can you post regarding this topic.
Static is good to use. I prefer to make all method static and make object static, this way I can use method of any object from any other object without stupid use of references and new().
The new() operation should never have been put into the Java language. It is a terrible concept when you can simply declare everything static and make develop much easier.
can you provide some thoughts on making a method static or not with respect to multithreading?
In addition to the answer to the above question who asked on making a method static or not with respect to multithreading?
If an method which is changing the state of an object and that object is used by multiple resources (resource could also be an object such as User,or any entity dependent on the changed object) then we can't make it static.Therefore an object operated in multi-threaded environment changing state of an object cannot be static.
Hi Javin,please put some emphasize on second point as well in brief i.e when we need to call a method without using any instance such as Single threaded task i.e where only one object active at a time.
Great article
Thanks for this insightful article. This is the first time I know about use of static methods, in past I didn't even know about how to call a static method, but once I know that you can call them just by using class name, I am kind of making every method static in my code. This gives me so many error like you can not use non static members in static context, then I started making all my member variable static, now my program is working fine. Do you think its right? Does making all variable and method static has any disadvantage in Java?
One reason to make your method static must be performance. Static method Invocations is 15%-20% faster than virtual method invocation. It's also good programming practice, because you can tell from the method signature that calling the method can't alter the object's state.
*Making all variables static has disadvantage.
Let's take an example of BankAccount class which has three variables accNo, accName, balance
for every account holder (instance of BankAccount) a copy of these three variable will be created if these are declared non static. However if we created them static then in this case only one copy would be created and every time a new instance is create the same copy would be shared and updated and there would be loss of data.
Identify the need of sharing data among instance only that variable should be static not all.
The good use of static key word is on final variables it assures a single copy of variable for all instances.
So don't make your all variables static instead create a one object in your static method to access the non static data.
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