I use this small blog to help my new colleagues on board who have Java programming background to understand the hello world example written in ABAP.
Hello World example in Java
The following example could be done in pure text editor without Java IDE. You should have JDK installed as prerequisite and corresponding environment variable setup correctly.
Once done, type javac -version in command line, you should see the following output: ( result may vary based on your JDK version )
In my laptop the javac.exe is in this folder:
(1) Create a folder in c:\temp\testPackage.
(2) Create a file HelloWorld.java in text editor with source code below:
package testPackage;
import tool.Tools;
public class HelloWorld {
public HelloWorld(a) {}static public void main(String[] arg){
System.out.println("Hello World"); Tools.Print(); }}Copy the code
Create another folder in C:\temp\tool.
And another Tools.java:
package tool;
public class Tools{
static public void Print(a){
System.out.println("I am tool!"); }}Copy the code
This example shows that the HelloWorld class has dependency on Tools class.
(1) Now compile HelloWorld class via javac:
Once done, HelloWorld.class is generated:
Also the same for Tools.class, even though we do NOT manually compile Tools.java via javac.
(2) Now make some change on Tools.java:
And execute HelloWorld, still the old string before change is printed:
(3) Compile Tools.java again, new version of Tools.class is generated.
This time execute HelloWorld and you could observe the new string printed out.
And the byte code for HelloWorld is still unchanged.
Byte Code in ABAP – ABAP Load
The following texts are copied from ABAP help:
Result of generating an ABAP program using ABAP Compiler. The statements in the byte code are associated with C functions. When the ABAP program is executed, the byte code is loaded into the PXA as the program load and interpreted by the ABAP runtime environment (virtual machine), which accesses the associated C functions.
Let’s repeat the same test in ABAP.
(1) Create a new include ZTOOL and activate it:
form print.
WRITE: / 'Hello World.'.
endform.
Copy the code
And create a new HelloWorld report and activate it as well.
REPORT ZHELLOWORLD.
INCLUDE ztool.
START-OF-SELECTION.
PERFORM print.
Copy the code
(2) Execute report RSDEPEND to analyze the dependency of report ZHELLOWORLD. ( You can find some examples how to use this report RSDEPEND from blog Use report RSDEPEND to analyze ABAP load dependencies )
The result shows that ZHELLOWORLD has dependency on ZTOOL. The timestamp of ZHELLOWORLD is larger than ZTOOL since it is activated later than ZHELLOWORLD.
(3) Make some changes on ZHELLOWORLD, for example add one line comment and activate it again.
This time the timestamp of ZHELLOWORLD changes, however ZTOOL remains unchanged.
(4) Now make changes on ZTOOL, activate the change. Don’t touch ZHELLOWORLD.
This time the timestamp of ZHELLOWORLD is also changed which equals exactly to the change timestamp of ZTOOL.
The generated ABAP load for a given report could be found from table REPOLOAD:
Further reading
I have written a series of blogs which compare the language feature among ABAP, JavaScript and Java. You can find a list of them below:
- Lazy Loading, Singleton and Bridge design pattern in JavaScript and in ABAP
- Functional programming – Simulate Curry in ABAP
- Functional Programming – Try Reduce in JavaScript and in ABAP
- Simulate Mockito in ABAP
- A simulation of Java Spring dependency injection annotation @Inject in ABAP
- Singleton bypass – ABAP and Java
- Weak reference in ABAP and Java
- Fibonacci Sequence in ES5, ES6 and ABAP
- Java byte code and ABAP Load
- How to write a correct program rejected by compiler: Exception handling in Java and in ABAP
- An small example to learn Garbage collection in Java and in ABAP
- String Template in ABAP, ES6, Angular and React
- Try to access static private attribute via ABAP RTTI and Java Reflection
- Local class in ABAP, Java and JavaScript
- Integer in ABAP, Java and JavaScript
- Covariance in Java and simulation in ABAP
- Various Proxy Design Pattern implementation variants in Java and ABAP
- Tag(Marker) Interface in ABAP and Java
- Bitwise operation ( OR, AND, XOR ) on ABAP Integer
- ABAP ICF handler and Java Servlet
- ADBC and JDBC
- CL_ABAP_CORRESPONDING, CL_JAVA_CORRESPONDING and CL_JS_CORRESPONDING
- Build an Cross Site Scripting example in Java and ABAP
- Play around with JSONP in nodeJS server and ABAP server
For more of Jerry’s original articles, please follow the public account “Wang Zixi “: