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A function signature (or type signature, or method signature) defines input and output of functions or methods.
A signature can include:
- parameters and their types
- a return value and type
- exceptions that might be thrown or passed back
- information about the availability of the method in an object-oriented program (such as the keywords
public
,static
, orprototype
).
In depth
Signatures in JavaScript
JavaScript is a loosely typed or a dynamic language. That means you don't have to declare the type of a variable ahead of time. The type will get determined automatically while the program is being processed. A signature in JavaScript can still give you some information about the method:
MyObject.prototype.myFunction(value)
- The method is installed on an object called
MyObject
. - The method is installed on the
prototype
ofMyObject
(thus it is an instance method) as opposed to being a static method. - The name of the method is
myFunction
.
- The method accepts one parameter, which is called
value
and is not further defined.
Signatures in Java
In Java, signatures are used to identify methods and classes at the level of the virtual machine code. You have to declare types of variables in your code in order to be able to run the Java code. Java is strictly typed and will check any parameters at compilation time if they are correct.
public static void main(String[] args)
- The
public
keyword is an access modifier and indicates that this method can be called by any object. - The
static
keyword indicates that this method is a class method as opposed to being an instance method. - The
void
keyword indicates that this method has no return value. - The name of the method is
main
. - The method accepts one parameter of type String Array. It is named
args.
Learn more
General knowledge
- Java internal type signatures on Wikipedia