Implementation difference between Aggregation and Composition in Java

A simple Composition program

public class Person {
    private double salary;
    private String name;
    private Birthday bday;

    public Person(int y,int m,int d,String name){
        bday=new Birthday(y, m, d);
        this.name=name;
    }


    public double getSalary() {
        return salary;
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    public Birthday getBday() {
        return bday;
    }

    ///////////////////////////////inner class///////////////////////
    private class Birthday{
        int year,month,day;

        public Birthday(int y,int m,int d){
            year=y;
            month=m;
            day=d;
        }

        public String toString(){
           return String.format("%s-%s-%s", year,month,day);

        }
    }

    //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

}
public class CompositionTst {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        // TODO code application logic here
        Person person=new Person(2001, 11, 29, "Thilina");
        System.out.println("Name : "+person.getName());
        System.out.println("Birthday : "+person.getBday());

        //The below object cannot be created. A bithday cannot exixts without a Person 
        //Birthday bday=new Birthday(1988,11,10);

    }
}

I would use a nice UML example.

Take a university that has 1 to 20 different departments and each department has 1 to 5 professors. There is a composition link between a University and its' departments. There is an aggregation link between a department and its' professors.

Composition is just a STRONG aggregation, if the university is destroyed then the departments should also be destroyed. But we shouldn't kill the professors even if their respective departments disappear.

In java :

public class University {

     private List<Department> departments;

     public void destroy(){
         //it's composition, when I destroy a university I also destroy the departments. they cant live outside my university instance
         if(departments!=null)
             for(Department d : departments) d.destroy();
         departments.clean();
         departments = null;
     }
}

public class Department {

     private List<Professor> professors;
     private University university;

     Department(University univ){
         this.university = univ;
         //check here univ not null throw whatever depending on your needs
     }

     public void destroy(){
         //It's aggregation here, we just tell the professor they are fired but they can still keep living
         for(Professor p:professors)
             p.fire(this);
         professors.clean();
         professors = null;
     }
}

public class Professor {

     private String name;
     private List<Department> attachedDepartments;

     public void destroy(){

     }

     public void fire(Department d){
         attachedDepartments.remove(d);
     }
}

Something around this.

EDIT: an example as requested

public class Test
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        University university = new University();
        //the department only exists in the university
        Department dep = university.createDepartment();
        // the professor exists outside the university
        Professor prof = new Professor("Raoul");
        System.out.println(university.toString());
        System.out.println(prof.toString());

        dep.assign(prof);
        System.out.println(university.toString());
        System.out.println(prof.toString());
        dep.destroy();

        System.out.println(university.toString());
        System.out.println(prof.toString());

    }


}

University class

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;

public class University {

    private List<Department> departments = new ArrayList<>();

    public Department createDepartment() {
        final Department dep = new Department(this, "Math");
        departments.add(dep);
        return dep;
    }

    public void destroy() {
        System.out.println("Destroying university");
        //it's composition, when I destroy a university I also destroy the departments. they cant live outside my university instance
        if (departments != null)
            departments.forEach(Department::destroy);
        departments = null;
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return "University{\n" +
                "departments=\n" + departments.stream().map(Department::toString).collect(Collectors.joining("\n")) +
                "\n}";
    }
}

Department class

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;

public class Department {

    private final String name;
    private List<Professor> professors = new ArrayList<>();
    private final University university;

    public Department(University univ, String name) {
        this.university = univ;
        this.name = name;
        //check here univ not null throw whatever depending on your needs
    }

    public void assign(Professor p) {
        //maybe use a Set here
        System.out.println("Department hiring " + p.getName());
        professors.add(p);
        p.join(this);
    }

    public void fire(Professor p) {
        //maybe use a Set here
        System.out.println("Department firing " + p.getName());
        professors.remove(p);
        p.quit(this);
    }

    public void destroy() {
        //It's aggregation here, we just tell the professor they are fired but they can still keep living
        System.out.println("Destroying department");
        professors.forEach(professor -> professor.quit(this));
        professors = null;
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return professors == null
                ? "Department " + name + " doesn't exists anymore"
                : "Department " + name + "{\n" +
                "professors=" + professors.stream().map(Professor::toString).collect(Collectors.joining("\n")) +
                "\n}";
    }
}

Professor class

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

public class Professor {

    private final String name;
    private final List<Department> attachedDepartments = new ArrayList<>();

    public Professor(String name) {
        this.name = name;
    }

    public void destroy() {

    }

    public void join(Department d) {
        attachedDepartments.add(d);
    }

    public void quit(Department d) {
        attachedDepartments.remove(d);
    }

    public String getName() {
        return name;
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return "Professor " + name + " working for " + attachedDepartments.size() + " department(s)\n";
    }
}

The implementation is debatable as it depends on how you need to handle creation, hiring deletion etc. Unrelevant for the OP


Composition

final class Car {

  private final Engine engine;

  Car(EngineSpecs specs) {
    engine = new Engine(specs);
  }

  void move() {
    engine.work();
  }
}

Aggregation

final class Car {

  private Engine engine;

  void setEngine(Engine engine) {
    this.engine = engine;
  }

  void move() {
    if (engine != null)
      engine.work();
  }
}

In the case of composition, the Engine is completely encapsulated by the Car. There is no way for the outside world to get a reference to the Engine. The Engine lives and dies with the car. With aggregation, the Car also performs its functions through an Engine, but the Engine is not always an internal part of the Car. Engines may be swapped, or even completely removed. Not only that, but the outside world can still have a reference to the Engine, and tinker with it regardless of whether it's in the Car.