...how many objects will be created?? One or two?
Two. But only one of them is kept. The other is immediately eligible for garbage collection.
Will new operator creates one more object?
Yes. Briefly. But then you call its .intern method and save the result. Its .intern method will return the same interned string that s1 points to, and so the object created via new is (again) immediately eligible for GC.
We can see this if we look at the bytecode:
public static void main(java.lang.String[]);
Code:
0: ldc #2 // String Hello
2: astore_1
3: new #3 // class java/lang/String
6: dup
7: ldc #2 // String Hello
9: invokespecial #4 // Method java/lang/String."":(Ljava/lang/String;)V
12: invokevirtual #5 // Method java/lang/String.intern:()Ljava/lang/String;
15: astore_2
16: getstatic #6 // Field java/lang/System.out:Ljava/io/PrintStream;
19: aload_2
20: invokevirtual #7 // Method java/io/PrintStream.println:(Ljava/lang/String;)V
23: getstatic #6 // Field java/lang/System.out:Ljava/io/PrintStream;
26: aload_1
27: aload_2
28: if_acmpne 35
31: iconst_1
32: goto 36
35: iconst_0
36: invokevirtual #8 // Method java/io/PrintStream.println:(Z)V
39: return
3-9 create a new String object from "Hello", leaving its reference on the stack, and then we immediately call intern (which pops the reference to the new string from the stack), and store the return value of intern in s4. So the object temporarily created is no longer referenced.
.intern()at the end of your second line makes it different from this, this, and this.