Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Java O-O Concepts

                                       Classes and objects                                      
class describes the data and the methods of its objects. Every object belongs to some class.
An object contains data (instance variables) representing its state, and instance methods, which are the things it can do.
A class may also contain its own data (class variables) and class methods. The keyword static denotes such data and methods.
An object "knows" what class it belongs to, and can use class data and class methods, but a class does not "know" about its objects.
Classes form a hierarchy (tree), with Object at the root. Every class, except Object, has one and only one immediate superclass, but that class has its own immediate superclass, and so on all the way up to Object at the root, and all of these are superclasses of the class. The keyword extends denotes the immediate superclass.
A class contains one or more constructors for making new objects of that class. If (and only if) the programmer does not write a constructor, Java provides a default constructor with no arguments. The default constructor sets instance variables as follows: numeric types are set to zero, boolean variables are set to falsechar variables are set to '\0', and object variables are set to null.
The purpose of a constructor is to create an object in a valid state. No other work should be done in a constructor.
When a constructor executes, the very first thing it does is call the constructor for its superclass. You can write this constructor call explicitly, with super(...);, or you can let it implicitly call the default constructor.
A constructor for a class can call another constructor for the same class by putting this(...); as the first thing in the constructor. This allows you to avoid repeating code.
Objects are declared just like primitive values, with the syntax ClassName objectName; but are not defined (allocated space and given a value) until you create one by calling the constructor with the keyword new.
Classes inherit all the data and all the methods of their superclasses, but do not inherit constructors.
You can assign an object of a class to a variable (that is, variable = object) declared to be of that class or any of its superclasses (thus, you can assign any object to a variable of type Object). If you have an object in a more general variable or expression (for example, a String value in an Object variable), you can cast it to the correct type with the syntax (type)variable or (type)(expression).
Casting an object to a more general type is called upcasting, and is always legal. Casting an object to a more specific type is called downcasting, and Java inserts a run-time check to ensure that the cast is legal. Casting does not affect what the object is, it only changes what fields and methods are available on the object at the position the cast occurs.
A class that is declared as final may not be extended by subclasses.
The instanceof operator tests whether its left operand (an object) is an instance of its right operand (a class or interface). The result will be true if the right operand is the class or any superclass of the object. Well-designed programs have very little need for the instanceof operator.
A Java source file may contain only one public class, though it may contain additional non-public classes. The name of the file must be the same as the name of the class, but with the .java extension.
Classes should be as self-contained and independent as it is reasonable to make them. The interface (the fields and methods it makes available outside the class) should be kept small.
An object is responsible for keeping itself in a valid state. Therefore, it should limit write access to essential fields.
                               Access                                                   

Variables and methods are accessed by name.
There are three dimensions to accessing names: namespaces, scope, and access modifiers.
Java uses six different namespaces: package names, type names, field (variable) names, method names, local variable names (including parameters), and labels. Identical names of different types do not conflict; for example, a method may be named the same as a local variable. However, it's best to avoid reusing names in this manner.
The scope of a name is the part of a class in which it can be seen.
  • A variable declared anywhere in a class can be seen everywhere in a class.
  • The scope of a method's formal parameters is the entire method.
  • The scope of a variable declared in a block (indicated by braces, { }) extends from the declaration to the closing brace. A method body is always a block.
  • The scope of a variable declared in the initialization part of a for loop is the entire for loop.
Class variables and class methods (denoted by the keyword static) can be used anywhere within the class.
Instance variables and instance methods can be used anywhere within the class except in static methods.
Within an instance method, the keyword this refers to the object currently executing the method.
When an instance variable and a formal parameter have the same name, the name refers to the formal parameter; prefix the name with this. to refer to the instance variable.
To refer to an instance name in a different object, use the syntax otherObject.name. To refer to a class (static) name in a different class, use the syntax OtherClass.name.
You can refer to a name (class or instance) in another class if and only if you have access privileges. Possible access privileges are:
  • public : You can access it from anywhere.
  • protected : You can access it from any other class in the same directory (folder), or from any subclass.
  • package (default) : You can access it from any other class in the same directory.
  • private : You cannot access it from outside the class.
You can refer to a name in a class in another package in either of two ways:
  • You can use the fully-qualified name, for instance java.awt.Color.red
  • You can import a specific class or (with *) all classes in a given package, then use the name as if you had defined it yourself.

Methods


method is a named executable chunk of code.
All executable statements must be in methods. (Exception: "initialization blocks," not covered here.)
A method has a signature consisting of its name and the number and types of its parameters (also called "arguments"). The parameters in the method declaration are its formal parameters.
A method has a return type, which is not part of its signature. If the return type is other than void, then the method must return a value of the specified type.
A method may have local variables (also called method variables). These follow the scope rules, and are never available anywhere outside the method. The concepts staticpublicprotected, package, and private do not apply to local variables. Formal parameters are a kind of local variable.
Every method must have a signature that is unique within its class. Methods in other classes (even superclasses and subclasses) may have the same signature.
An instance method is executed by sending a message to its object. The message consists of: a reference to the object (typically its name), a dot, the name of the method, and zero or more actual parameters enclosed in parentheses.
A class method is executed by sending a message to the class. The message consists of: the name of the class, a dot, the name of the method, and zero or more actual parameters enclosed in parentheses.
When a message is sent, and before the method executes, the values of the actual parameters are copied into the corresponding formal parameters. Then the method body executes. Then the return value replaces the message, and all local names are forgotten.

Polymorphism

The two kinds of polymorphism are overloading and overriding.Overloading occurs when a class declares two or more methods with the same name but different signatures. When a message is sent to an object or class with overloaded methods, the method with the best matching signature is the one that is used ("invoked").
  • If the message and the method have a different number of parameters, no match is possible.
  • If the message and the method have exactly the same types of parameters, that is the best possible match.
  • Messages with specific actual parameter types can invoke methods with more general formal parameter types. For example if the formal parameter type is Object, an actual parameter of typeString is acceptable (since a String value can be assigned to an Object variable). If the formal parameter is type double, an actual parameter of type int can be used (for similar reasons).
  • If there is no clear best match, Java reports a syntax error.
Overriding occurs when a class declares a method with the same signature as that of an inherited method. When a message is sent to the object (or class, if it's a class method), the locally-defined method is the one that is used.
  • Overriding is commonly used to make methods more specific.
  • When a method name is overridden, you can still invoke the superclass' method (from inside the class) with the syntax super.name(parameters).
  • From outside the class, you can cast an object to its superclass and then invoke the method, with the syntax ((Superclass)object).name(parameters).
  • Although the return type is not part of the signature, an overriding must have the same return type as the method it overrides.
  • The overriding method may not throw any exception types in addition to those thrown by the method it overrides (although it may throw fewer exception types).
A class can declare a variable with the same name as an inherited variable, thus "hiding" or shadowing the inherited version. (This is like overriding, but for variables.)
  • Shadowing should be avoided.
  • When shadowing does happen, you can access the superclass name by either the syntax super.name or by casting the object to its superclass, with the syntax ((Superclass)object).name.
Interfaces and abstract classes

The purpose of interfaces and abstract methods is to ensure that any classes derived from them will share the same set of methods.An abstract method is a method that is declared but not defined. It is declared with the keyword abstract, and has a header like any other method, but ends with a semicolon instead of a method body.
An abstract class is one that contains one or more abstract methods; it must itself be declared with the abstract keyword. A class may be declared abstract even if it does not contain any abstract methods. A non-abstract class is sometimes called a concrete class.
An abstract class cannot be instantiated; that is, no objects of that class can be created. Instead, you can create subclasses that define (in the usual way) the inherited abstract methods, and these subclasses can be instantiated.
An interface is declared with the keyword interface instead of the keyword class. An interface may contain only abstract methods and definitions of constants (that is, final variables). The keywordabstract before each method is optional.
A class may extend only one other class, but it may implement any number of interfaces. The syntax is: class Class extends Superclass implements Interface1,Interface2, .... When a class extends an interface, it may implement (define) some or all of the inherited abstract methods. A class must itself be declared abstract if it inherits abstract methods that it does not define.
A variable may be declared to have a type that is an abstract class or an interface; any object whose type implements or extends the variable's type may be assigned to that variable. The instanceofoperator may take a class, abstract class, or interface as its right operand.

Inner classes

An inner class is a class declared within another class. The four kinds of inner class are: (1) member class, (2) static member class, (3) local inner class, and (4) anonymous inner class. Unlike "outer" classes, the usual scope rules apply to inner classes.
member class is defined at the top level of the class, along with fields and methods. It may have the same access modifiers as variables (publicprotectedpackagestaticfinal), and is accessed in much the same way as variables of that class.
static member class is defined like a member class, but with the keyword static. Despite its position inside another class, a static member class is actually an "outer" class--it has no special access to names in its containing class. To refer to the static inner class from a class outside the containing class, use the syntax OuterClassName.InnerClassName. A static member class may contain static fields and methods.
local inner class is defined within a method, and the usual scope rules apply to it. It is only accessible within that method, therefore access restrictions (publicprotectedpackage) do not apply. However, because objects (and their methods) created from this class may persist after the method returns, a local inner class may not refer to parameters or non-final local variables or of the method.
An anonymous inner class is one that is declared and used to create one object (typically as a parameter to a method), all within a single statement. The anonymous inner class may either extend a class or implement an interface; the syntax is the same: new Super(parameters){methods}, where Super is the name of the extended class or implemented interface, parameters are the parameters to the constructor for that class or interface (usually just ()), and methods override any inherited methods.
The keyword static may not be used within any inner class except a static member class.