Thread methods in Java

On the previous page, we looked at how to construct a thread in Java, via the Runnable and Thread objects. We mentioned that the Thread class provides control over threads. So on this page, we take a high-level look at the most important methods on this class.

Thread.sleep()

We actually saw a sneak preview of Thread.sleep() in our Java threading introduction. This static method asks the system to put the current thread to sleep for (approximately) the specified amount of time, effectively allowing us to implement a "pause". A thread can be interrupted from its sleep.

For more details, see: Thread.sleep() (separate page).

interrupt()

As mentioned, you can call a Thread object's interrupt() method to interrupt the corresponding thread if it is sleeping or waiting. The corresponding thread will "wake up" with an IOException at some point in the future. See thread interruption for more details.

setPriority() / getPriority()

Sets and queries some platform-specific priority assignment of the given thread. When calculating a priority value, it's good practice to always do so in relation to the constants Thread.MIN_PRIORITY, Thread.NORM_PRIORITY and Thread.MAX_PRIORITY. In practice, values go from 1 to 10, and map on to some machine-specific range of values: nice values in the case of Linux, and local thread priorities in the case of Windows. These are generally the range of values of "normal" user threads, and the OS will actually still run other threads beyond these values (so, for example, you can't preempt the mouse pointer thread by setting a thread to MAX_PRIORITY!).

Three main issues with thread priorities are that:

For more information, see the section on thread scheduling and the discussion on thread priorities, where the behaviour on different platforms is compared.

join()

The join() method is called on the Thread object representing enother thread. It tells the current thread to wait for the other thread to complete. To wait for multiple threads at a time, you can use a CountDownLatch.

Thread.yield()

This method effectively tells the system that the current thread is "willing to relinquish the CPU". What it actually does is quite system-dependent. For more details, see: Thread.yield() (separate page).

setName() / getName()

Threads have a name attached to them. By default, Java will attach a fairly dull name such as Thread-12. But for debugging purposes you might want to attach a more meaningful name such as Animation Thread, WorkerThread-10 etc. (Some of the variants of the Thread constructor actually allow you to pass in a name from the start, but you can always change it later.)

Other thread functions

There are occasionally other things that you may wish to do with a thread that don't correspond to a single method. In particular, there is no safe method to stop a thread, and instead you should simply let the corresponding run() method exit.


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Editorial page content written by Neil Coffey. Copyright © Javamex UK 2021. All rights reserved.