The set() method of a AtomicReferenceArray class is used to set the value of the element at index i to newValue. Both index i and newValue are passed as parameters to the method. This method set the value with memory semantics of reading as if the variable was declared volatile type of variable.
Syntax:
public final void set(int i, E newValue)
Parameters: This method accepts:
- i which is an index of AtomicReferenceArray to perform the operation,
- newValue which is the new value to set.
Return value: This method returns nothing.
Below programs illustrate the set() method:
Program 1:
// Java program to demonstrate // AtomicReferenceArray.set() method import java.util.concurrent.atomic.*; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) { // create an atomic reference object. AtomicReferenceArray<Integer> ref = new AtomicReferenceArray<Integer>( 5 ); // set some value and print ref.set( 0 , 2345 ); ref.set( 1 , 543 ); ref.set( 2 , 322 ); System.out.println( "Value of index 0 = " + ref.get( 0 )); System.out.println( "Value of index 1 = " + ref.get( 1 )); System.out.println( "Value of index 2 = " + ref.get( 2 )); } } |
Value of index 0 = 2345 Value of index 1 = 543 Value of index 2 = 322
Program 2:
// Java program to demonstrate // AtomicReferenceArray.set() method import java.util.concurrent.atomic.*; public class GFG { public static void main(String[] args) { // create an atomic reference object.c AtomicReferenceArray<String> ref = new AtomicReferenceArray<String>( 5 ); // set some value ref.set( 0 , "C" ); ref.set( 1 , "PYTHON" ); ref.set( 2 , "TS" ); ref.set( 3 , "C++" ); ref.set( 4 , "C" ); // print for ( int i = 0 ; i < 5 ; i++) { System.out.println(ref.get(i)); } } } |
C PYTHON TS C++ C
References: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/10/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/atomic/AtomicReferenceArray.html#set(int, E)