Well so many good Answers, I want to add more on this. This will help to understand Extending v/s Implementing Thread
.
Extends binds two class files very closely and can cause some pretty hard to deal with code.
Both approaches do the same job but there have been some differences.
The most common difference is
- When you extend Thread class, after that you can’t extend any other class which you required. (As you know, Java does not allow inheriting more than one class).
- When you implement Runnable, you can save space for your class to extend any other class in the future or now.
However, one significant difference between implementing Runnable and extending Thread is that
by extending Thread, each of your threads has a unique object associated with it, whereas implementing Runnable, many threads can share the same object instance.
The following example will help you to understand more clearly
//Implement Runnable Interface...
class ImplementsRunnable implements Runnable {
private int counter = 0;
public void run() {
counter++;
System.out.println("ImplementsRunnable : Counter : " + counter);
}
}
//Extend Thread class...
class ExtendsThread extends Thread {
private int counter = 0;
public void run() {
counter++;
System.out.println("ExtendsThread : Counter : " + counter);
}
}
//Use the above classes here in main to understand the differences more clearly...
public class ThreadVsRunnable {
public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception {
// Multiple threads share the same object.
ImplementsRunnable rc = new ImplementsRunnable();
Thread t1 = new Thread(rc);
t1.start();
Thread.sleep(1000); // Waiting for 1 second before starting next thread
Thread t2 = new Thread(rc);
t2.start();
Thread.sleep(1000); // Waiting for 1 second before starting next thread
Thread t3 = new Thread(rc);
t3.start();
// Creating new instance for every thread access.
ExtendsThread tc1 = new ExtendsThread();
tc1.start();
Thread.sleep(1000); // Waiting for 1 second before starting next thread
ExtendsThread tc2 = new ExtendsThread();
tc2.start();
Thread.sleep(1000); // Waiting for 1 second before starting next thread
ExtendsThread tc3 = new ExtendsThread();
tc3.start();
}
}
Output of the above program.
ImplementsRunnable : Counter : 1
ImplementsRunnable : Counter : 2
ImplementsRunnable : Counter : 3
ExtendsThread : Counter : 1
ExtendsThread : Counter : 1
ExtendsThread : Counter : 1
In the Runnable interface approach, only one instance of a class is being created and it has been shared by different threads. So the value of counter is incremented for each and every thread access.
Whereas, Thread class approach, you must have to create separate instance for every thread access. Hence different memory is allocated for every class instances and each has separate counter, the value remains same, which means no increment will happen because none of the object reference is same.
When to use Runnable?
Use Runnable interface when you want to access the same resources from the group of threads. Avoid using Thread class here, because multiple objects creation consumes more memory and it becomes a big performance overhead.
A class that implements Runnable is not a thread and just a class. For a Runnable to become a Thread, You need to create an instance of Thread and passing itself in as the target.
In most cases, the Runnable interface should be used if you are only planning to override the run()
method and no other Thread methods. This is important because classes should not be subclassed unless the programmer intends on modifying or enhancing the fundamental behavior of the class.
When there is a need to extend a superclass, implementing the Runnable interface is more appropriate than using the Thread class. Because we can extend another class while implementing Runnable interface to make a thread.
I hope this will help!
interrupt()
. Again, it's an idea, it might be useful in the right case, however I do not recommend it. – bestsss