Yes, it's almost the same. The protected modifier specifies that the member can only be accessed within its own package (as with package-private) and, in addition, by a subclass of its class in another package.
Package-private and default access are synonyms. An object can also access protected member of the objects whose classes are in the same package. An object can also access protected member of its superclasses without a condition about their package. As a concrete example :
package ab;
class A {
protected void foo() {}
void dd(){}
}
class C {
void aa(){
A a = new A();
a.foo(); //legal
a.dd(); //legal
}
}
package sub;
class D extends A{
void ac(){
foo(); //legal ..
dd(); //illegal.. because dd has default access..
}
class E {
void ee(){
A a = new A();
a.foo(); //illegal
a.dd(); //illegal
}
The "default" access modifier (the one where none of them are explicitly given) is "package-private", which means only things in the same package can access them. However, being in the same package implies nothing about the inheritance relationship between classes -- it's purely a naming convention.
"Protected" means that not only classes in the same package, but also subclasses (regardless of which package those subclasses are in) will be able to access it.
6.6.5 Example: Default-Access Fields, Methods, and Constructors If
none of the access modifiers public,
protected, or private are specified, a
class member or constructor is
accessible throughout the package that
contains the declaration of the class
in which the class member is declared,
but the class member or constructor is
not accessible in any other package.
If a public class has a method or
constructor with default access, then
this method or constructor is not
accessible to or inherited by a
subclass declared outside this package
The default access for classes is package-private, however the default access for interface members is public.
e.g.
public interface I {
int A = 1;
// same as
public static final int A = 1;
void method();
// same as
public abstract void method();
class C { }
// same as
public static class C { }
}
The default access rules for interfaces are not the same as for classes.
'Package private' and default access are the same. In early releases of the compiler around 1.1.2/3, 'package' was an allowed modifier, but ignored, meaning the same as no modifier, i.e. 'package private'. Shortly afterwards there was a short lived fashion for putting /*package*/ (as a comment) in such situations. Similarly at that time you could declare things like synchronized classes, although again there was no actual semantic effect.
Neither of them is the same as 'protected', which extends to derived classes in other packages.
default and package-private both are same, which means both can be used by any class till they are in same package.
The package-private term, actually, is termed by the meaning of private modifier as private means it is available only in same class and no other classes or subclasses can access it within same package or without.