In general, the answer to your question is “yes”, but…
.equals(...)
will only compare what it is written to compare, no more, no less.- If a class does not override the equals method, then it defaults to the
equals(Object o)
method of the closest parent class that has overridden this method. - If no parent classes have provided an override, then it defaults to the method from the ultimate parent class, Object, and so you’re left with the
Object#equals(Object o)
method. Per the Object API this is the same as==
; that is, it returns true if and only if both variables refer to the same object, if their references are one and the same. Thus you will be testing for object equality and not functional equality. - Always remember to override
hashCode
if you overrideequals
so as not to “break the contract”. As per the API, the result returned from thehashCode()
method for two objects must be the same if theirequals
methods show that they are equivalent. The converse is not necessarily true.