The separate start() and run()
methods in the Thread class provide two ways to create threaded programs. The
start() method starts the execution of the new thread and calls the run()
method. The start() method returns immediately and the new thread normally
continues until the run() method returns.
The Thread class' run() method
does nothing, so sub-classes should override the method with code to execute in
the second thread. If a Thread is instantiated with a Runnable argument, the
thread's run() method executes the run() method of the Runnable object in the
new thread instead.
Depending on the nature of your
threaded program, calling the Thread run() method directly can give the same
output as calling via the start() method, but in the latter case the code is
actually executed in a new thread.
No comments:
Post a Comment