In Java toUppercase() is a method of the class String: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/String.html#toUpperCase()
There is not strict rule. It is only a convention. Most Java programmers use camel case for methods and variables. All uppercase are usually reserved for constants.
uppercase
it depends mostly it is written in lower case but few start with an uppercase as Java is case sensitive
You can use the toUpperCase() method on a String to convert any String to all uppercase.
Yes. Overloaded methods are also Java methods and all Java methods can be overridden.
There are three different methods /functions in java are there : 1)computational methods.2)manipulative methods.3)procedural methods.
uppercase
it depends mostly it is written in lower case but few start with an uppercase as Java is case sensitive
You can use the toUpperCase() method on a String to convert any String to all uppercase.
Yes. Overloaded methods are also Java methods and all Java methods can be overridden.
There are three different methods /functions in java are there : 1)computational methods.2)manipulative methods.3)procedural methods.
through the imporrt
If you are talking about Java, that will cause confusion with the built-in "String" class. Sure, Java will distinguish "String" (with an uppercase "S") from "string" (which has no uppercase letters), but it can be confusing for the programmer. In various other programming languages, the situation may be similar.
Externalizable interface is a subclass of Serializable. Java provides Externalizable interface so as to give you more control over what is being serialized and what is not. Using this interface, you can Serialize only the fields of the class you want serialize and ignore the rest. This interface defines 2 methods: readExternal() and writeExternal() and you have to implement these methods in the class that will be serialized. In these methods you'll have to write code that reads/writes only the values of the attributes you are interested in. Programs that perform serialization and deserialization have to write and read these attributes in the same sequence
A java object is a collection of methods and properties defined in the Java programming language.
If you mean Java, you can get the documentation for the Integer class (with an uppercase "I") here: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/lang/Integer.html
System.out.println("text"); or System.out.print("text"); Please note that Java is case sensitive, meaning you must match uppercase and lowercase exactly.
The actions in a java class are called methods.