Post on 15-Jan-2016
transcript
Chapter 10Classes Continued
Fundamentals of Java
Fundamentals of Java 2
Objectives
Know when it is appropriate to include class (static) variables and methods in a class.
Understand the role of Java interfaces in a software system and define an interface for a set of implementing classes.
Understand the use of inheritance by extending a class.
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Objectives (cont.)
Understand the use of polymorphism and know how to override methods in a superclass.
Place the common features (variables and methods) of a set of classes in an abstract class.
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Objectives (cont.)
Understand the implications of reference types for equality, copying, and mixed-mode operations.
Know how to define and use methods that have preconditions, postconditions, and throw exceptions.
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Vocabulary
Abstract class Abstract method Aggregation Class (static) method Class (static) variable Concrete class Dependency
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Vocabulary (cont.)
Final method Inheritance Interface Overriding Postcondition Precondition
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Class (static) Variables and Methods
static variables and methods belong to a class.– Not an instance of the class
Class variable: Storage allocated at program startup – Independent of number of instances created
Class method: Activated when message sent to the class rather than to an object
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Class variables and methods are declared with the keyword static.
Example:– private static int studentCount = 0;
Shared by all instances of the class with this declaration
Use a static variable in any situation in which all instances share a common data value.
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Use static methods to provide public access to static variables.
Class constants: Combine keyword final with keyword static– Example:
public static final int MIN_SCORE = 0;
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Static variables, methods, and constants example
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Static variables, methods, and constants example (cont.)
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Using class variables example:
Using class constants example:
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Class (static) Variables and Methods (cont.)
Two rules for using static variables:– Class methods can reference only static
variables. Never instance variables
– Instance methods can reference static and instance variables.
The main method for an executable java class is static.– JVM sends main message to start a program.
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Turtle Graphics
Open-source Java package for drawing– Used in this text to illustrate features of object-
oriented programming– Pen used for drawing on a window
StandardPen is a specific type of Pen.
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Turtle Graphics (cont.)
Table 10-1: Pen messages
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Turtle Graphics (cont.)
Example 10.1: Drawing a square using Turtle Graphics
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Java Interfaces—The Client Perspective
Interface: A list of a class’s public methods– Provides information to use a class without
revealing its implementation– When related classes have same interface, they
can be used interchangeably in a program. In Turtle Graphics, Pen is an interface.
– StandardPen, WigglePen, and RainbowPen are examples of classes that conform to the Pen interface.
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Java Interfaces—The Client Perspective (cont.)
A Java interface specifies the method signatures for an interface.
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Java Interfaces—The Client Perspective (cont.)
An interface is not a class.– But can be used as a data type
Having multiple classes conform to the same interface allows for polymorphic behavior:
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Java Interfaces—The Client Perspective (cont.)
A class that conforms to an interface is said to implement the interface.
When declaring a variable or parameter, use the interface type when possible.– Methods using interface types are more
general.– They are easier to maintain.
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Java Interfaces—The Implementation Perspective
A class implements an interface using the implements keyword.
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
A class that implements an interface must implement every method in the interface.
A variable declared with the interface type can reference objects of any class that implements the interface.
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
The Circle class
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
The Circle class (cont.)
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
Example 10.3: Try out some shapes
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
Example 10.3: Try out some shapes (cont.)
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
Figure 10.3: Output from the TestShapes program
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
Important interface concepts:– Interface contains only methods, never
variables.– Interface methods are usually public.– If more than one class implements an interface,
its methods are polymorphic.
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Java Interfaces – The Implementation Perspective (cont.)
Important interface concepts (cont.):– A class can implement methods in addition to
those listed in the interface.– A class can implement more than one interface.– Interfaces can be in an inheritance hierarchy.
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance
All classes are part of a large class hierarchy.– Object class is the root.– Each class inherits variables and methods of the
classes above it in the hierarchy.New classes can add new variables, add new
methods, or alter existing inherited methods.
– Class immediately above a class is a superclass.– Any classes that inherit are subclasses.
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
A class can only have one superclass, but may have many subclasses.
The descendents of a class consist of its subclasses, their subclasses, etc.
Figure 10-4: Part of a class hierarchy
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
A class can inherit the characteristics of another class using the extends keyword.
The Wheel class extends the Circle class.
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
The Wheel class extends the Circle class (cont.).
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
Example 10.4: Draw a wheel and a circle.
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
Figure 10-5: A circle and a wheel with the same radius but different positions
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
Wheel implements Shape because it extends Circle, which implements Shape.
xPos, yPos, and radius inherited by Wheel from Shape– Must modify these instance variables in Shape
to be protected rather than privateProtected access modifier means variables
are accessible only in current class and its descendents.
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Code Reuse Through Inheritance (cont.)
Methods may also be protected. A constructor may call superclass constructor
using super();. To call one of superclass methods:
Overriding: A subclass can modify a superclass method by re-implementing it.
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Inheritance and Abstract Classes
Abstract class: Provides functionality (methods), but can never be instantiated– Can only be extended– Declared with keyword abstract– May contain standard methods and abstract
methods
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Inheritance and Abstract Classes (cont.)
Abstract method: A method with no body– Defined using keyword abstract– A class with an abstract method will also be
abstract.– A subclass of an abstract class must implement
every abstract method in that class. Final methods: Methods that cannot be
overridden in a subclass
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Inheritance and Abstract Classes (cont.)
Partial abstract class/method example:
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A Java interface has a name and consists of a list of method headers.
One or more classes can implement the same interface.
If a variable is declared as an interface type, it can be associated with an object from any class that implements the interface.
Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes
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Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes (cont.)
If a class implements an interface, then all of its subclasses do so implicitly.
A subclass inherits all of the characteristics of its superclass.– Subclass can add new variables and methods or
modify inherited methods.
Characteristics common to several classes can be collected in a common abstract superclass that is never instantiated.
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Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes (cont.)
An abstract class can contain headers for abstract methods that are implemented in the subclasses.
A class’s constructors and methods can use constructors and methods in the superclass.
Inheritance reduces repetition and promotes the reuse of code.
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Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes (cont.)
Interfaces and inheritance promote the use of polymorphism.
When a message is sent to an object, Java looks for a matching method.– Search starts in the object’s class and, if
necessary, continues up the class hierarchy
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Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes (cont.)
Four ways in which methods in a subclass can be related to methods in a superclass:– Implementation of an abstract method– Extension– Overriding– Finality
It is possible to work only with abstract classes, forgoing interfaces.
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Interfaces, Inheritance, and Relationships among Classes (cont.)
Figure 10-7: Three types of relationships among classes
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Acceptable Classes for Parameters and Return Values
If an object of class BBB is expected, it is always acceptable to substitute an object of a subclass. – But never of a superclass
A subclass of BBB inherits all of BBB’s methods.No guarantees about the methods in the
superclass
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Error Handling with Classes
Before implementing error handling code, must determine error conditions for a class
Preconditions: Describe what must be true before a particular method is called– Values for parameters/instance variables
Postconditions: Describe what must be true after a particular method has been executed– Return values and altered instance variables
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Error Handling with Classes (cont.)
Example:
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Exceptions
JVM can throw exceptions when illegal operations are attempted.
Commonly used exception classes:
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Exceptions (cont.)
Can throw exceptions in methods:– To enforce pre-conditions or any other condition
Syntax:
Example:
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Exceptions (cont.)
Exceptions to enforce pre-conditions:
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Exceptions (cont.)
Clients who call such methods need to catch the exceptions so the program does not halt.– Embed method call in a try-catch statement
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Exceptions (cont.)
A method may throw more than one type of exception.– Client can handle each type explicitly.
Example:
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Reference Types, Equality, and Object Identity
Aliasing: Two reference variables point to same object
Comparing objects for equality:– Comparing two reference variables using ==
indicates whether the variables point to the same object.
– To compare values of two distinct objects for equality, use the equals method.
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Reference Types, Equality, and Object Identity (cont.)
equals method: Defined in Object class– Uses == operator by default– A class must override equals to allow for
comparison of object’s contents.
Example:
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Reference Types, Equality, and Object Identity (cont.)
Copying objects:– Aliasing is not copying.– Use a copy constructor:
– Implement Clonable:
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Summary
Class (static) variables provide storage for data that all instances of a class can access but do not have to own separately.
Class (static) methods are written primarily for class variables.
An interface specifies a set of methods that implementing classes must include.– Gives clients enough information to use a class
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Summary (cont.)
Polymorphism and inheritance reduce the amount of code that must be written by servers and learned by clients.
Classes that extend other classes inherit their data and methods.
Methods in different classes that have the same name are polymorphic.
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Summary (cont.)
Abstract classes are not instantiated.– Help organize related subclasses– Contain their common data and methods
Error handling can be distributed among methods and classes by using preconditions, postconditions, and exceptions.
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Summary (cont.)
Because of the possibility of aliasing, the programmer should provide: – equals method for comparing for equality– clone method for creating a copy of an object