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Unit01 Review

This document provides a review of key object-oriented concepts in Java including inheritance, abstract classes, and interfaces. It defines inheritance and how subclasses can inherit and override methods from a parent class. It describes abstract classes and how they can define common behaviors for subclasses through abstract methods. It also explains interfaces and how they allow classes to support multiple inheritance by implementing multiple interfaces that define common method signatures.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
10 views16 pages

Unit01 Review

This document provides a review of key object-oriented concepts in Java including inheritance, abstract classes, and interfaces. It defines inheritance and how subclasses can inherit and override methods from a parent class. It describes abstract classes and how they can define common behaviors for subclasses through abstract methods. It also explains interfaces and how they allow classes to support multiple inheritance by implementing multiple interfaces that define common method signatures.

Uploaded by

bappahmuhammad18
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Review of Object-Oriented Concepts in JAVA

• Object-Oriented Concepts supported by JAVA.

• Advantages of Object-Orientation.

• Inheritance.

• Abstract Classes.

• Interfaces.

• Review Questions.
Object-Oriented Concepts supported by JAVA

• Java provides explicit support for many of the fundamental Object-


Oriented Concepts. Some of these are:
– Classification: Grouping related things together. This is
supported through classes, inheritance & packages.
– Encapsulation: Representing data and the set of operations on
the data as a single entity - exactly what classes do.
– Information Hiding: An object should be in full control of its
data, granting specific access only to whom it wishes.
– Inheritance: Java allows related classes to be organized in a
hierarchical manner using the extends keyword.
– Polymorphism: Same code behaves differently at different
times during execution. This is due to dynamic binding.
Advantages of Object-Orientation.

• A number of advantages can be derived as a result of these object-


oriented features. Some of these are:
– Reusability: Rather than endlessly rewriting same piece of
code, we write it once and use it or inherit it as needed.
– Extensibility: A class can be extended without affecting its
users provided the user-interface remains the same.
– Maintainability: Again, once the user-interface does not
changed, the implementation can be changed at will.
– Security: Thanks to information hiding, a user can only access
the information he has been allowed to access.
– Abstraction: Classification and Encapsulation allow portrayal of
real-world problems in a simplified model.
Review of inheritance
• Suppose we have the following Employee class:

class Employee {
protected String name;
protected double payRate;
public Employee(String name, double payRate) {
this.name = name;
this.payRate = payRate;
}
public String getName() {return name;}
public void setPayRate(double newRate) {
payRate = newRate;
}
public double pay() {return payRate;}
public void print() {
System.out.println("Name: " + name);
System.out.println("Pay Rate: "+payRate);
}
}
Review of inheritance (contd.)
• Now, suppose we wish to define another class to
represent a part-time employee whose salary is paid per
hour. We inherit from the Employee class as follows:

class HourlyEmployee extends Employee {


private int hours;
public HourlyEmployee(String hName, double hRate) {
super(hName, hRate);
hours = 0;
}
public void addHours(int moreHours) {hours += moreHours;}
public double pay() {return payRate * hours;}
public void print() {
super.print();
System.out.println("Current hours: " + hours);
}
}
Notes about Inheritance

• We observe the following from the examples on inheritance:


• Methods and instance variables of the super class are inherited by
subclasses, thus allowing for code reuse.
• A subclass can define additional instance variables (e.g. hours) and
additional methods (e.g. addHours).
• A subclass can override some of the methods of the super class to
make them behave differently (e.g. the pay & print)
• Constructors are not inherited, but can be called using the super
keyword. such a call must be the first statement.
• If the constructor of the super class is not called, then the
complier inserts a call to the default constructor -watch out!
• super may also be used to call a method of the super class.
Review of Abstract Classes

• Inheritance enforces hierarchical organization, the benefit of which


are: reusability, type sharing and polymorphism.
• Java uses Abstract classes & Interfaces to further strengthen the
idea of inheritance.
• To see the role of abstract of classes, suppose that the pay method
is not implemented in the HourlyEmployee subclass.
• Obviously, the pay method in the Employee class will be assumed,
which will lead to wrong result.
• One solution is to remove the pay method out and put it in another
extension of the Employee class, MonthlyEmployee.
• The problem with this solution is that it does not force subclasses of
Employee class to implement the pay method.
Review of Abstract Classes (Cont'd)
• The solution is to declare the pay method of the Employee class as
abstract, thus, making the class abstract.

abstract class Employee {


protected String name;
protected double payRate;
public Employee(String empName, double empRate) {
name = empName;
payRate = empRate;
}
public String getName() {return name;}
public void setPayRate(double newRate) {payRate = newRate;}

abstract public double pay();

public void print() {


System.out.println("Name: " + name);
System.out.println("Pay Rate: "+payRate);
}
}
Review of Abstract Classes (Cont'd)

• The following extends the Employee abstract class to get


MonthlyEmployee class.

class MonthlyEmployee extends Employee {


public MonthlyEmployee(String empName, double empRate) {
super(empName, empRate);
}
public double pay() {
return payRate;
}
}

• The next example extends the MonthlyEmployee class to get the


Executive class.
Review of Abstract Classes (Cont'd)
class Executive extends MonthlyEmployee {
private double bonus;
public Executive(String exName, double exRate) {
super(exName, exRate);
bonus = 0;
}
public void awardBonus(double amount) {
bonus = amount;
}
public double pay() {
double paycheck = super.pay() + bonus;
bonus = 0;
return paycheck;
}
public void print() {
super.print();
System.out.println("Current bonus: " + bonus);
}
}

HourlyEmployee

Employee
MonthlyEmployee Executive
Review of Abstract Classes (Cont'd)
• The following further illustrates the advantages of organizing
classes using inheritance - same type, polymorphism, etc.
public class TestAbstractClass {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Employee[] list = new Employee[3];
list[0] = new Executive("Jarallah Al-Ghamdi", 50000);
list[1] = new HourlyEmployee("Azmat Ansari", 120);
list[2] = new MonthlyEmployee("Sahalu Junaidu", 9000);
((Executive)list[0]).awardBonus(11000);
for(int i = 0; i < list.length; i++)
if(list[i] instanceof HourlyEmployee)
((HourlyEmployee)list[i]).addHours(60);
for(int i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
list[i].print();
System.out.println("Paid: " + list[i].pay());
System.out.println("*************************");
}
}
}

The Program Output


Review of Interfaces

• Interfaces are not classes, they are entirely a separate entity.


• They provide a list of abstract methods which MUST be
implemented by a class that implements the interface.
• Unlike abstract classes which may contain implementation of some
of the methods, interfaces provide NO implementation.
• Like abstract classes, the purpose of interfaces is to provide
organizational structure.
• More importantly, interfaces are here to provide a kind of "multiple
inheritance" which is not supported in Java.
• If both parents of a child implement a method, which one does the
child inherits? - Multiple inheritance confusion.
• Interfaces allow a child to be both of type A and B.
Review of Interfaces (contd.)

• Recall that Java has the Comparable interface defined as:

interface Comparable {
int compareTo(Object o);
}

• Recall also that java has the java.util.Arrays class, which has a sort
method that can sort any array whose contents are either primitive
values or Comparable objects.
• Thus, to sort our list of Employee objects, all we need is to modify
the Employee class to implement the Comparable interface.
• Notice that this will work even if the Employee class is extending
another class or implementing another interface.
• This modification is shown in the next page.
Review of Interfaces (contd.)
abstract class Employee implements Comparable {
protected String name;
protected double payRate;
public Employee(String empName, double empRate)
{
name = empName;
payRate = empRate;
}
public String getName() {return name;}
public void setPayRate(double newRate) {
payRate = newRate;
}
abstract public double pay();
public int compareTo(Object o) {
Employee e = (Employee) o;
return name.compareTo( e.getName());
}
}
HourlyEmployee
Comparable Employee Executive
MonthlyEmployee
Review of Interfaces (contd.)
• Since Employee class implements the Comparable interface, the array of
employees can now be sorted as shown below:
import java.util.Arrays;
public class TestInterface {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Employee[] list = new Employee[3];
list[0] = new Executive("Jarallah Al-Ghamdi", 50000);
list[1] = new HourlyEmployee("Azmat Ansari", 120);
list[2] = new MonthlyEmployee("Sahalu Junaidu", 9000);
((Executive)list[0]).awardBonus(11000);
for(int i = 0; i < list.length; i++)
if(list[i] instanceof HourlyEmployee)
((HourlyEmployee)list[i]).addHours(60);
Arrays.sort(list);
for(int i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
list[i].print();
System.out.println("Paid: " + list[i].pay());
System.out.println("**********************");
}
}
}

The program output


Review Questions
• How does an interface differ from an abstract class? All methods of interface
must be implemented. Abstract may or may not be.

• Why does Java not support multiple inheritance? What feature of Java helps
realize the benefits of multiple inheritance? INTERFACE.To allow a child class
to inherit from multiple super classes.

• An Abstract class must contain at least one abstract method, (true or false)?
TRUE

• A subclass typically represents a larger number of objects than its super class,
(true or false)? TRUE

• A subclass typically encapsulates less functionality than its super class does,
(true or false)? I DOUBT..FALSE

• An instance of a class can be assigned to a variable of type any of the


interfaces the class implements, (true or false)? true

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