CH13
CH13
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 1
Motivations
You have learned how to write simple programs
to create and display GUI components. Can you
write the code to respond to user actions, such as
clicking a button to perform an action?
In order to write such code, you have to know
about interfaces. An interface is for defining
common behavior for classes (including
unrelated classes). Before discussing interfaces,
we introduce a closely related subject: abstract
classes.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 2
Objectives
To design and use abstract classes (§13.2).
To generalize numeric wrapper classes, BigInteger, and BigDecimal
using the abstract Number class (§13.3).
To process a calendar using the Calendar and GregorianCalendar
classes (§13.4).
To specify common behavior for objects using interfaces (§13.5).
To define interfaces and define classes that implement interfaces
(§13.5).
To define a natural order using the Comparable interface (§13.6).
To make objects cloneable using the Cloneable interface (§13.7).
To explore the similarities and differences among concrete classes,
abstract classes, and interfaces (§13.8).
To design the Rational class for processing rational numbers (§13.9).
To design classes that follow the class-design guidelines (§13.10).
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 3
Abstract Classes and Abstract Methods
GeometricObject
Circle
Rectangle
TestGeometricObject
Run
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abstract method in abstract class
An abstract method cannot be contained in a
nonabstract class. If a subclass of an abstract
superclass does not implement all the abstract
methods, the subclass must be defined abstract. In
other words, in a nonabstract subclass extended from
an abstract class, all the abstract methods must be
implemented, even if they are not used in the
subclass.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 5
object cannot be created from
abstract class
An abstract class cannot be instantiated using
the new operator, but you can still define its
constructors, which are invoked in the
constructors of its subclasses. For instance,
the constructors of GeometricObject are
invoked in the Circle class and the Rectangle
class.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 6
abstract class without abstract
method
A class that contains abstract methods must
be abstract. However, it is possible to define
an abstract class that contains no abstract
methods. In this case, you cannot create
instances of the class using the new operator.
This class is used as a base class for defining
a new subclass.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 7
superclass of abstract class may be
concrete
A subclass can be abstract even if its
superclass is concrete. For example, the
Object class is concrete, but its subclasses,
such as GeometricObject, may be abstract.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 8
concrete method overridden to be
abstract
A subclass can override a method from its
superclass to define it abstract. This is rare,
but useful when the implementation of the
method in the superclass becomes invalid in
the subclass. In this case, the subclass must be
defined abstract.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 9
abstract class as type
You cannot create an instance from an
abstract class using the new operator, but an
abstract class can be used as a data type.
Therefore, the following statement, which
creates an array whose elements are of
GeometricObject type, is correct.
GeometricObject[] geo = new GeometricObject[10];
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 10
Case Study: the Abstract Number Class
LargestNumbers Run
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The Abstract Calendar Class and Its
GregorianCalendar subclass
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The Abstract Calendar Class and Its
GregorianCalendar subclass
An instance of java.util.Date represents a specific
instant in time with millisecond precision.
java.util.Calendar is an abstract base class for
extracting detailed information such as year, month,
date, hour, minute and second from a Date object.
Subclasses of Calendar can implement specific
calendar systems such as Gregorian calendar, Lunar
Calendar and Jewish calendar. Currently,
java.util.GregorianCalendar for the Gregorian
calendar is supported in the Java API.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 13
The GregorianCalendar Class
You can use new GregorianCalendar() to construct
a default GregorianCalendar with the current time
and use new GregorianCalendar(year, month, date)
to construct a GregorianCalendar with the specified
year, month, and date. The month parameter is 0-
based, i.e., 0 is for January.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 14
The get Method in Calendar Class
The get(int field) method defined in the Calendar class is useful to
extract the date and time information from a Calendar object. The
fields are defined as constants, as shown in the following.
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Getting Date/Time Information from
Calendar
TestCalendar
Run
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Interfaces
What is an interface?
Why is an interface useful?
How do you define an interface?
How do you use an interface?
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What is an interface?
Why is an interface useful?
An interface is a classlike construct that contains
only constants and abstract methods. In many
ways, an interface is similar to an abstract class,
but the intent of an interface is to specify common
behavior for objects. For example, you can specify
that the objects are comparable, edible, cloneable
using appropriate interfaces.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 18
Define an Interface
To distinguish an interface from a class, Java uses the
following syntax to define an interface:
public interface InterfaceName {
constant declarations;
abstract method signatures;
}
Example:
public interface Edible {
/** Describe how to eat */
public abstract String howToEat();
}
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 19
Interface is a Special Class
An interface is treated like a special class in Java.
Each interface is compiled into a separate bytecode
file, just like a regular class. Like an abstract class,
you cannot create an instance from an interface
using the new operator, but in most cases you can
use an interface more or less the same way you use
an abstract class. For example, you can use an
interface as a data type for a variable, as the result
of casting, and so on.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 20
Example
You can now use the Edible interface to specify whether an object
is edible. This is accomplished by letting the class for the object
implement this interface using the implements keyword. For
example, the classes Chicken and Fruit implement the Edible
interface (See TestEdible).
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 21
Omitting Modifiers in Interfaces
All data fields are public final static and all methods are public
abstract in an interface. For this reason, these modifiers can be
omitted, as shown below:
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 22
Example: The Comparable Interface
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The toString, equals, and hashCode
Methods
Each wrapper class overrides the toString,
equals, and hashCode methods defined in the
Object class. Since all the numeric wrapper
classes and the Character class implement the
Comparable interface, the compareTo
method is implemented in these classes.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 24
Integer and BigInteger Classes
public class Integer extends Number public class BigInteger extends Number
implements Comparable<Integer> { implements Comparable<BigInteger> {
// class body omitted // class body omitted
@Override @Override
public int compareTo(Integer o) { public int compareTo(BigInteger o) {
// Implementation omitted // Implementation omitted
} }
} }
@Override @Override
public int compareTo(String o) { public int compareTo(Date o) {
// Implementation omitted // Implementation omitted
} }
} }
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 25
Example
1 System.out.println(new Integer(3).compareTo(new Integer(5)));
2 System.out.println("ABC".compareTo("ABE"));
3 java.util.Date date1 = new java.util.Date(2013, 1, 1);
4 java.util.Date date2 = new java.util.Date(2012, 1, 1);
5 System.out.println(date1.compareTo(date2));
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 26
Generic sort Method
Let n be an Integer object, s be a String object, and
d be a Date object. All the following expressions are
true.
n instanceof Integer s instanceof String d instanceof java.util.Date
n instanceof Object s instanceof Object d instanceof Object
n instanceof Comparable s instanceof Comparable d instanceof Comparable
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 27
Defining Classes to Implement Comparable
ComparableRectangle SortRectangles
Run
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The Cloneable Interfaces
Marker Interface: An empty interface.
A marker interface does not contain constants or methods.
It is used to denote that a class possesses certain desirable
properties. A class that implements the Cloneable
interface is marked cloneable, and its objects can be
cloned using the clone() method defined in the Object
class.
package java.lang;
public interface Cloneable {
}
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 29
Examples
Many classes (e.g., Date and Calendar) in the Java library implement
Cloneable. Thus, the instances of these classes can be cloned. For
example, the following code
displays
calendar == calendarCopy is false
calendar.equals(calendarCopy) is true
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 30
Implementing Cloneable Interface
To define a custom class that implements the Cloneable
interface, the class must override the clone() method in
the Object class. The following code defines a class
named House that implements Cloneable and
Comparable.
House
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Shallow vs. Deep Copy
House house1 = new House(1, 1750.50);
House house2 = (House)house1.clone();
Shallow
Copy
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 32
Shallow vs. Deep Copy
House house1 = new House(1, 1750.50);
House house2 = (House)house1.clone();
Deep
Copy
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 33
Interfaces vs. Abstract Classes
In an interface, the data must be constants; an abstract class can
have all types of data.
Each method in an interface has only a signature without
implementation; an abstract class can have concrete methods.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 34
Interfaces vs. Abstract Classes, cont.
All classes share a single root, the Object class, but there is no single root for
interfaces. Like a class, an interface also defines a type. A variable of an interface
type can reference any instance of the class that implements the interface. If a class
extends an interface, this interface plays the same role as a superclass. You can use
an interface as a data type and cast a variable of an interface type to its subclass,
and vice versa.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 36
Whether to use an interface or a class?
Abstract classes and interfaces can both be used to model
common features. How do you decide whether to use an
interface or a class? In general, a strong is-a relationship that
clearly describes a parent-child relationship should be modeled
using classes. For example, a staff member is a person. A weak
is-a relationship, also known as an is-kind-of relationship,
indicates that an object possesses a certain property. A weak
is-a relationship can be modeled using interfaces. For example,
all strings are comparable, so the String class implements the
Comparable interface. You can also use interfaces to
circumvent single inheritance restriction if multiple inheritance
is desired. In the case of multiple inheritance, you have to
design one as a superclass, and others as interface.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 37
The Rational Class
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Designing a Class, cont.
(Separating responsibilities) A single entity with too
many responsibilities can be broken into several classes
to separate responsibilities. The classes String,
StringBuilder, and StringBuffer all deal with strings, for
example, but have different responsibilities. The String
class deals with immutable strings, the StringBuilder
class is for creating mutable strings, and the
StringBuffer class is similar to StringBuilder except that
StringBuffer contains synchronized methods for
updating strings.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 40
Designing a Class, cont.
Classes are designed for reuse. Users can
incorporate classes in many different combinations,
orders, and environments. Therefore, you should
design a class that imposes no restrictions on what
or when the user can do with it, design the
properties to ensure that the user can set properties
in any order, with any combination of values, and
design methods to function independently of their
order of occurrence.
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Designing a Class, cont.
Provide a public no-arg constructor and override
the equals method and the toString method
defined in the Object class whenever possible.
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Designing a Class, cont.
Follow standard Java programming style and
naming conventions. Choose informative names
for classes, data fields, and methods. Always
place the data declaration before the constructor,
and place constructors before methods. Always
provide a constructor and initialize variables to
avoid programming errors.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 43
Using Visibility Modifiers
Each class can present two contracts – one for the users
of the class and one for the extenders of the class. Make
the fields private and accessor methods public if they are
intended for the users of the class. Make the fields or
method protected if they are intended for extenders of
the class. The contract for the extenders encompasses the
contract for the users. The extended class may increase
the visibility of an instance method from protected to
public, or change its implementation, but you should
never change the implementation in a way that violates
that contract.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, Global Edition. © Pearson Education Limited 2015 44
Using Visibility Modifiers, cont.
A class should use the private modifier to hide its
data from direct access by clients. You can use get
methods and set methods to provide users with
access to the private data, but only to private data
you want the user to see or to modify. A class should
also hide methods not intended for client use. The
gcd method in the Rational class is private, for
example, because it is only for internal use within the
class.
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Using the static Modifier
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