A good answer might be:

No.


Picture of the Program

The speak() method is part of an object. It exists only when there is an object to contain it (unlike a static method that does not need an object.) The picture shows the action, just as step 3 starts.

The variable anObject is a reference to the object that was constructed. That object contains the method speak(). So main() can find and activate speak() with:

anObject.speak();

You might think that this is a needlessly complicated way to write a message on the monitor. And you would be correct. But remember that this is a simple example of object oriented programming. Later on, when the task gets really complicated, using objects greatly simplifies programming. Writing large programs in Java takes only one third to one fifth of the time it takes to write in other languages.


QUESTION 12:

Does the class HelloObject have a constructor?