This line:
a = b;
Sets the value of a to the current value of b. That's all it does. The current value of b is null, so it's equivalent to:
a = null;
It does not associate the two variables. It just copies the value of one to another.
Changing the value of a afterwards does not change b at all. The two variables are entirely separate. Note that this is exactly the same for primitive types:
int a = 10;
int b = a;
a = 5;
System.out.println(b); // Prints 10, not 5
Even if you had:
ArrayList<String> a = new ArrayList<String>();
ArragList<String> b = a;
a.add("Hello");
System.out.println(b.get(0)); // Prints "Hello"
That's still not really showing a relationship between the variables a and b. They have the same value, so they refer to the same object (the ArrayList itself) - changes to that object can be observed via either variable. But changing the value of each variable to refer to a different list (or null) won't affect either the other variable or the object itself.
One thing which may be confusing you is what the value of a or b actually is. The value of a variable (or any other expression) in Java is never an object - it's always either a reference or a primitive value.
So an assignment operator, or passing an argument to a method, or anything like that will never copy the object - it will only ever copy the value of the expression (a reference or a primitive value).
Once you understand this, Java starts to make a lot more sense...
a=new ArrayList();. Were you expecting something else? – Mob Oct 29 '11 at 17:08