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1/3/2003




                                                   core

                                                   Web
                                                   programming

            Basic Object-Oriented
            Programming in Java

1                          © 2001-2003 Marty Hall, Larry Brown http://www.corewebprogramming.com




    Agenda
    • Similarities and differences between Java
      and C++
    • Object-oriented nomenclature and
      conventions
    • Instance variables (fields)
    • Methods (member functions)
    • Constructors




2    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming                   www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                                         1
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    Object-Oriented Programming
    in Java
    • Similarities with C++
       – User-defined classes can be used the same way as built-in
         types.
       – Basic syntax
    • Differences from C++
       – Methods (member functions) are the only function type
       – Object is the topmost ancestor for all classes
       – All methods use the run-time, not compile-time, types
         (i.e. all Java methods are like C++ virtual functions)
       – The types of all objects are known at run-time
       – All objects are allocated on the heap (always safe to
         return objects from methods)
       – Single inheritance only
3    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




    Object-Oriented Nomenclature
    • “Class” means a category of things
       – A class name can be used in Java as the type of a field or
         local variable or as the return type of a function (method)
    • “Object” means a particular item that
      belongs to a class
       – Also called an “instance”

    • For example, consider the following line:
                   String s1 = "Hello";
       – Here, String is the class, and the variable s1 and the value
         "Hello" are objects (or “instances of the String class”)

4    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




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        Example 1: Instance Variables
        (“Fields” or “Data Members”)
    class Ship1 {
      public double x, y, speed, direction;
      public String name;
    }

    public class Test1 {
      public static void main(String[] args) {
        Ship1 s1 = new Ship1();
        s1.x = 0.0;
        s1.y = 0.0;
        s1.speed = 1.0;
        s1.direction = 0.0;   // East
        s1.name = "Ship1";
        Ship1 s2 = new Ship1();
        s2.x = 0.0;
        s2.y = 0.0;
        s2.speed = 2.0;
        s2.direction = 135.0; // Northwest
        s2.name = "Ship2";
        ...
5       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




        Instance Variables: Example
        (Continued)
            ...
            s1.x = s1.x + s1.speed
                   * Math.cos(s1.direction * Math.PI          / 180.0);
            s1.y = s1.y + s1.speed
                   * Math.sin(s1.direction * Math.PI          / 180.0);
            s2.x = s2.x + s2.speed
                   * Math.cos(s2.direction * Math.PI          / 180.0);
            s2.y = s2.y + s2.speed
                   * Math.sin(s2.direction * Math.PI          / 180.0);
            System.out.println(s1.name + " is at ("
                               + s1.x + "," + s1.y +          ").");
            System.out.println(s2.name + " is at ("
                               + s2.x + "," + s2.y +          ").");
        }
    }



6       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




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        Instance Variables: Results
    • Compiling and Running:
        javac Test1.java
        java Test1


    Output:
        Ship1 is at (1,0).
        Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421).




7       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




        Example 1: Major Points
    •   Java naming convention
    •   Format of class definitions
    •   Creating classes with “new”
    •   Accessing fields with
        “variableName.fieldName”




8       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




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     Java Naming Conventions
     • Leading uppercase letter in class name

        public class MyClass {
           ...
        }

     • Leading lowercase letter in field, local
       variable, and method (function) names
        – myField, myVar, myMethod




9     Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




     First Look at Java Classes
     • The general form of a simple class is
        modifier class Classname {

             modifier data-type field1;
             modifier data-type field2;
             ...
             modifier data-type fieldN;

             modifier Return-Type methodName1(parameters) {
               //statements
             }

             ...

             modifier Return-Type methodName2(parameters) {
               //statements
             }
        }
10    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




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     Objects and References
     • Once a class is defined, you can easily
       declare a variable (object reference) of the
       class
                Ship s1, s2;
                Point start;
                Color blue;

     • Object references are initially null
        – The null value is a distinct type in Java and should not
          be considered equal to zero
        – A primitive data type cannot be cast to an object (use
          wrapper classes)
     • The new operator is required to explicitly
       create the object that is referenced
                  ClassName variableName = new ClassName();
11    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming                  www.corewebprogramming.com




     Accessing Instance Variables
     • Use a dot between the variable name and the field
       name, as follows:
                                              variableName.fieldName

     • For example, Java has a built-in class called Point
       that has x and y fields
                Point p = new Point(2, 3);                  // Build a Point object
                int xSquared = p.x * p.x;                   // xSquared is 4
                int xPlusY = p.x + p.y;                     // xPlusY is 5
                p.x = 7;
                xSquared = p.x * p.x;                       // Now xSquared is 49

     • One major exception applies to the “access fields
       through varName.fieldName” rule
        – Methods can access fields of current object without varName
        – This will be explained when methods (functions) are discussed

12    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming                  www.corewebprogramming.com




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      Example 2: Methods
     class Ship2 {
       public double x=0.0, y=0.0, speed=1.0, direction=0.0;
       public String name = "UnnamedShip";

         private double degreesToRadians(double degrees) {
           return(degrees * Math.PI / 180.0);
         }

         public void move() {
           double angle = degreesToRadians(direction);
           x = x + speed * Math.cos(angle);
           y = y + speed * Math.sin(angle);
         }

         public void printLocation() {
           System.out.println(name + " is at ("
                              + x + "," + y + ").");
         }
     }
13       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




      Methods (Continued)
     public class Test2 {
       public static void main(String[] args) {
         Ship2 s1 = new Ship2();
         s1.name = "Ship1";
         Ship2 s2 = new Ship2();
         s2.direction = 135.0; // Northwest
         s2.speed = 2.0;
         s2.name = "Ship2";
         s1.move();
         s2.move();
         s1.printLocation();
         s2.printLocation();
       }
     }
     • Compiling and Running:
                   javac Test2.java
                   java Test2
     • Output:
                   Ship1 is at (1,0).
                   Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421).
14       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                          7
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         Example 2: Major Points
     •   Format of method definitions
     •   Methods that access local fields
     •   Calling methods
     •   Static methods
     •   Default values for fields
     •   public/private distinction




15       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




         Defining Methods
         (Functions Inside Classes)
     • Basic method declaration:
         public ReturnType methodName(type1 arg1,
                                      type2 arg2, ...) {
           ...
           return(something of ReturnType);
         }

     • Exception to this format: if you declare the
       return type as void
           – This special syntax that means “this method isn’t going to
             return a value – it is just going to do some side effect like
             printing on the screen”
           – In such a case you do not need (in fact, are not permitted),
             a return statement that includes a value to be returned

16       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




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     Examples of Defining Methods
     • Here are two examples:
        – The first squares an integer
        – The second returns the faster of two Ship objects, assuming that a
          class called Ship has been defined that has a field named speed
       // Example function call:
       //   int val = square(7);

       public int square(int x) {
         return(x*x);
       }

       // Example function call:
       //   Ship faster = fasterShip(someShip, someOtherShip);

       public Ship fasterShip(Ship ship1, Ship ship2) {
            if (ship1.speed > ship2.speed) {
                return(ship1);
            } else {
                return(ship2);
            }
       }
17    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com




     Exception to the “Field Access
     with Dots” Rule
     • You normally access a field through
                                        variableName.fieldName

       but an exception is when a method of a class
       wants to access fields of that same class
        – In that case, omit the variable name and the dot
        – For example, a move method within the Ship class might do:
                        public void move() {
                          x = x + speed * Math.cos(direction);
                          ...
                        }
                • Here, x, speed, and direction are all fields within the class
                  that the move method belongs to, so move can refer to the fields
                  directly

        – As we’ll see later, you still can use the
          variableName.fieldName approach, and Java invents a variable
          called this that can be used for that purpose
18    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming            www.corewebprogramming.com




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     Calling Methods
     • The term “method” means “function associated
       with an object” (I.e., “member function”)
        – The usual way that you call a method is by doing the following:

                   variableName.methodName(argumentsToMethod);

     • For example, the built-in String class has a
       method called toUpperCase that returns an
       uppercase variation of a String
        – This method doesn’t take any arguments, so you just put empty
          parentheses after the function (method) name.

                 String s1 = "Hello";
                 String s2 = s1.toUpperCase(); // s2 is now "HELLO"


19    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming      www.corewebprogramming.com




     Calling Methods (Continued)
     • There are two exceptions to requiring a variable
       name for a method call
        – Calling a method defined inside the current class definition
        – Functions (methods) that are declared “static”
     • Calling a method that is defined inside the current
       class
        – You don’t need the variable name and the dot
        – For example, a Ship class might define a method called
          degreeesToRadians, then, within another function in the same class
          definition, do this:
                     double angle = degreesToRadians(direction);

                • No variable name and dot is required in front of
                  degreesToRadians since it is defined in the same class as the
                  method that is calling it
20    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming      www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                         10
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     Static Methods
     • Static functions typically do not need to access
       any fields within their class and are almost like
       global functions in other languages
     • You can call a static method through the class
       name
                            ClassName.functionName(arguments);

        – For example, the Math class has a static method called cos that
          expects a double precision number as an argument
                • So you can call Math.cos(3.5) without ever having any object
                  (instance) of the Math class

     • Note on the main method
        – Since the system calls main without first creating an object, static
          methods are the only type of methods that main can call directly (i.e.
          without building an object and calling the method of that object)


21    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming        www.corewebprogramming.com




     Method Visibility
     • public/private distinction
        – A declaration of private means that “outside” methods
          can’t call it -- only methods within the same class can
                • Thus, for example, the main method of the Test2
                  class could not have done
                                  double x = s1.degreesToRadians(2.2);
                        – Attempting to do so would have resulted in an
                          error at compile time
        – Only say public for methods that you want to guarantee
          your class will make available to users
        – You are free to change or eliminate private methods
          without telling users of your class about


22    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming        www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                           11
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      Declaring Variables in Methods
     • When you declare a local variable inside of
       a method, the normal declaration syntax
       looks like:
                                           Type varName = value;


     • The value part can be:
         – A constant,
         – Another variable,
         – A function (method) call,
         – A “constructor” invocation (a special type of function
           prefaced by new that builds an object),
         – Some special syntax that builds an object without
           explicitly calling a constructor (e.g., strings)
23     Introduction to Object Oriented Programming             www.corewebprogramming.com




      Declaring Variables in Methods:
      Examples
     int x = 3;
     int y = x;

     // Special syntax for building a String object
     String s1 = "Hello";

     // Building an object the normal way
     String s2 = new String("Goodbye");

     String s3 = s2;
     String s4 = s3.toUpperCase(); // Result: s4 is "GOODBYE"

     // Assume you defined a findFastestShip method that
     // returns a Ship
     Ship ship1 = new Ship();
     Ship ship2 = ship1;
     Ship ship3 = findFastestShip();


24     Introduction to Object Oriented Programming             www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                                 12
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         Example 3: Constructors
     class Ship3 {
       public double x, y, speed, direction;
       public String name;

         public Ship3(double x, double y,
                      double speed, double direction,
                      String name) {
           this.x = x; // "this" differentiates instance vars
           this.y = y; // from local vars.
           this.speed = speed;
           this.direction = direction;
           this.name = name;
         }

         private double degreesToRadians(double degrees) {
           return(degrees * Math.PI / 180.0);
         }
         ...

25       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




         Constructors (Continued)
         public void move() {
           double angle = degreesToRadians(direction);
           x = x + speed * Math.cos(angle);
           y = y + speed * Math.sin(angle);
         }
         public void printLocation() {
           System.out.println(name + " is at ("
                              + x + "," + y + ").");
         }
     }
     public class Test3 {
       public static void main(String[] args) {
         Ship3 s1 = new Ship3(0.0, 0.0, 1.0,    0.0, "Ship1");
         Ship3 s2 = new Ship3(0.0, 0.0, 2.0, 135.0, "Ship2");
         s1.move();
         s2.move();
         s1.printLocation();
         s2.printLocation();
       }
     }
26       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                         13
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     Constructor Example: Results
     • Compiling and Running:
                javac Test3.java
                java Test3
     • Output:
                Ship1 is at (1,0).
                Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421).




27    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




     Example 3: Major Points
     • Format of constructor definitions
     • The “this” reference
     • Destructors (not!)




28    Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                      14
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         Constructors
     • Constructors are special functions called when a
       class is created with new
           – Constructors are especially useful for supplying values of fields
           – Constructors are declared through:
                           public ClassName(args) {
                             ...
                           }
           – Notice that the constructor name must exactly match the class name
           – Constructors have no return type (not even void), unlike a regular
             method
           – Java automatically provides a zero-argument constructor if and only
             if the class doesn’t define it’s own constructor
                   • That’s why you could say
                                                       Ship1 s1 = new Ship1();
                       in the first example, even though a constructor was never
                       defined


29       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming                      www.corewebprogramming.com




         The this Variable
     •      The this object reference can be used inside any
            non-static method to refer to the current object
     •      The common uses of the this reference are:
           1. To pass a reference to the current object as a parameter to other
              methods
                                                   someMethod(this);

           2. To resolve name conflicts
                   •     Using this permits the use of instance variables in methods
                         that have local variables with the same name

           –      Note that it is only necessary to say this.fieldName when you
                  have a local variable and a class field with the same name;
                  otherwise just use fieldName with no this


30       Introduction to Object Oriented Programming                      www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                                            15
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      Destructors



                 This Page Intentionally Left Blank




31     Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




      Summary
     • Class names should start with upper case; method
       names with lower case
     • Methods must define a return type or void if no
       result is returned
     • Access fields via objectName.fieldName
     • Access methods via objectName.methodName(args)
     • If a method accepts no arguments, the arg-list in the
       method declaration is empty instead of void as in C
     • Static methods do not require an instance of the
       class; they can be accessed through the class name
     • The this reference refers to the current object
     • Class constructors do not declare a return type
     • Java performs its own memory management and
       requires no destructors
32     Introduction to Object Oriented Programming   www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                       16
1/3/2003




                        core

                        Webprogramming

              Questions?


33   © 2001-2003 Marty Hall, Larry Brown http://www.corewebprogramming.com




                                                                                  17

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Java oop

  • 1. 1/3/2003 core Web programming Basic Object-Oriented Programming in Java 1 © 2001-2003 Marty Hall, Larry Brown http://www.corewebprogramming.com Agenda • Similarities and differences between Java and C++ • Object-oriented nomenclature and conventions • Instance variables (fields) • Methods (member functions) • Constructors 2 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 1
  • 2. 1/3/2003 Object-Oriented Programming in Java • Similarities with C++ – User-defined classes can be used the same way as built-in types. – Basic syntax • Differences from C++ – Methods (member functions) are the only function type – Object is the topmost ancestor for all classes – All methods use the run-time, not compile-time, types (i.e. all Java methods are like C++ virtual functions) – The types of all objects are known at run-time – All objects are allocated on the heap (always safe to return objects from methods) – Single inheritance only 3 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Object-Oriented Nomenclature • “Class” means a category of things – A class name can be used in Java as the type of a field or local variable or as the return type of a function (method) • “Object” means a particular item that belongs to a class – Also called an “instance” • For example, consider the following line: String s1 = "Hello"; – Here, String is the class, and the variable s1 and the value "Hello" are objects (or “instances of the String class”) 4 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 2
  • 3. 1/3/2003 Example 1: Instance Variables (“Fields” or “Data Members”) class Ship1 { public double x, y, speed, direction; public String name; } public class Test1 { public static void main(String[] args) { Ship1 s1 = new Ship1(); s1.x = 0.0; s1.y = 0.0; s1.speed = 1.0; s1.direction = 0.0; // East s1.name = "Ship1"; Ship1 s2 = new Ship1(); s2.x = 0.0; s2.y = 0.0; s2.speed = 2.0; s2.direction = 135.0; // Northwest s2.name = "Ship2"; ... 5 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Instance Variables: Example (Continued) ... s1.x = s1.x + s1.speed * Math.cos(s1.direction * Math.PI / 180.0); s1.y = s1.y + s1.speed * Math.sin(s1.direction * Math.PI / 180.0); s2.x = s2.x + s2.speed * Math.cos(s2.direction * Math.PI / 180.0); s2.y = s2.y + s2.speed * Math.sin(s2.direction * Math.PI / 180.0); System.out.println(s1.name + " is at (" + s1.x + "," + s1.y + ")."); System.out.println(s2.name + " is at (" + s2.x + "," + s2.y + ")."); } } 6 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 3
  • 4. 1/3/2003 Instance Variables: Results • Compiling and Running: javac Test1.java java Test1 Output: Ship1 is at (1,0). Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421). 7 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Example 1: Major Points • Java naming convention • Format of class definitions • Creating classes with “new” • Accessing fields with “variableName.fieldName” 8 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 4
  • 5. 1/3/2003 Java Naming Conventions • Leading uppercase letter in class name public class MyClass { ... } • Leading lowercase letter in field, local variable, and method (function) names – myField, myVar, myMethod 9 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com First Look at Java Classes • The general form of a simple class is modifier class Classname { modifier data-type field1; modifier data-type field2; ... modifier data-type fieldN; modifier Return-Type methodName1(parameters) { //statements } ... modifier Return-Type methodName2(parameters) { //statements } } 10 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 5
  • 6. 1/3/2003 Objects and References • Once a class is defined, you can easily declare a variable (object reference) of the class Ship s1, s2; Point start; Color blue; • Object references are initially null – The null value is a distinct type in Java and should not be considered equal to zero – A primitive data type cannot be cast to an object (use wrapper classes) • The new operator is required to explicitly create the object that is referenced ClassName variableName = new ClassName(); 11 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Accessing Instance Variables • Use a dot between the variable name and the field name, as follows: variableName.fieldName • For example, Java has a built-in class called Point that has x and y fields Point p = new Point(2, 3); // Build a Point object int xSquared = p.x * p.x; // xSquared is 4 int xPlusY = p.x + p.y; // xPlusY is 5 p.x = 7; xSquared = p.x * p.x; // Now xSquared is 49 • One major exception applies to the “access fields through varName.fieldName” rule – Methods can access fields of current object without varName – This will be explained when methods (functions) are discussed 12 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 6
  • 7. 1/3/2003 Example 2: Methods class Ship2 { public double x=0.0, y=0.0, speed=1.0, direction=0.0; public String name = "UnnamedShip"; private double degreesToRadians(double degrees) { return(degrees * Math.PI / 180.0); } public void move() { double angle = degreesToRadians(direction); x = x + speed * Math.cos(angle); y = y + speed * Math.sin(angle); } public void printLocation() { System.out.println(name + " is at (" + x + "," + y + ")."); } } 13 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Methods (Continued) public class Test2 { public static void main(String[] args) { Ship2 s1 = new Ship2(); s1.name = "Ship1"; Ship2 s2 = new Ship2(); s2.direction = 135.0; // Northwest s2.speed = 2.0; s2.name = "Ship2"; s1.move(); s2.move(); s1.printLocation(); s2.printLocation(); } } • Compiling and Running: javac Test2.java java Test2 • Output: Ship1 is at (1,0). Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421). 14 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 7
  • 8. 1/3/2003 Example 2: Major Points • Format of method definitions • Methods that access local fields • Calling methods • Static methods • Default values for fields • public/private distinction 15 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Defining Methods (Functions Inside Classes) • Basic method declaration: public ReturnType methodName(type1 arg1, type2 arg2, ...) { ... return(something of ReturnType); } • Exception to this format: if you declare the return type as void – This special syntax that means “this method isn’t going to return a value – it is just going to do some side effect like printing on the screen” – In such a case you do not need (in fact, are not permitted), a return statement that includes a value to be returned 16 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 8
  • 9. 1/3/2003 Examples of Defining Methods • Here are two examples: – The first squares an integer – The second returns the faster of two Ship objects, assuming that a class called Ship has been defined that has a field named speed // Example function call: // int val = square(7); public int square(int x) { return(x*x); } // Example function call: // Ship faster = fasterShip(someShip, someOtherShip); public Ship fasterShip(Ship ship1, Ship ship2) { if (ship1.speed > ship2.speed) { return(ship1); } else { return(ship2); } } 17 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Exception to the “Field Access with Dots” Rule • You normally access a field through variableName.fieldName but an exception is when a method of a class wants to access fields of that same class – In that case, omit the variable name and the dot – For example, a move method within the Ship class might do: public void move() { x = x + speed * Math.cos(direction); ... } • Here, x, speed, and direction are all fields within the class that the move method belongs to, so move can refer to the fields directly – As we’ll see later, you still can use the variableName.fieldName approach, and Java invents a variable called this that can be used for that purpose 18 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 9
  • 10. 1/3/2003 Calling Methods • The term “method” means “function associated with an object” (I.e., “member function”) – The usual way that you call a method is by doing the following: variableName.methodName(argumentsToMethod); • For example, the built-in String class has a method called toUpperCase that returns an uppercase variation of a String – This method doesn’t take any arguments, so you just put empty parentheses after the function (method) name. String s1 = "Hello"; String s2 = s1.toUpperCase(); // s2 is now "HELLO" 19 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Calling Methods (Continued) • There are two exceptions to requiring a variable name for a method call – Calling a method defined inside the current class definition – Functions (methods) that are declared “static” • Calling a method that is defined inside the current class – You don’t need the variable name and the dot – For example, a Ship class might define a method called degreeesToRadians, then, within another function in the same class definition, do this: double angle = degreesToRadians(direction); • No variable name and dot is required in front of degreesToRadians since it is defined in the same class as the method that is calling it 20 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 10
  • 11. 1/3/2003 Static Methods • Static functions typically do not need to access any fields within their class and are almost like global functions in other languages • You can call a static method through the class name ClassName.functionName(arguments); – For example, the Math class has a static method called cos that expects a double precision number as an argument • So you can call Math.cos(3.5) without ever having any object (instance) of the Math class • Note on the main method – Since the system calls main without first creating an object, static methods are the only type of methods that main can call directly (i.e. without building an object and calling the method of that object) 21 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Method Visibility • public/private distinction – A declaration of private means that “outside” methods can’t call it -- only methods within the same class can • Thus, for example, the main method of the Test2 class could not have done double x = s1.degreesToRadians(2.2); – Attempting to do so would have resulted in an error at compile time – Only say public for methods that you want to guarantee your class will make available to users – You are free to change or eliminate private methods without telling users of your class about 22 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 11
  • 12. 1/3/2003 Declaring Variables in Methods • When you declare a local variable inside of a method, the normal declaration syntax looks like: Type varName = value; • The value part can be: – A constant, – Another variable, – A function (method) call, – A “constructor” invocation (a special type of function prefaced by new that builds an object), – Some special syntax that builds an object without explicitly calling a constructor (e.g., strings) 23 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Declaring Variables in Methods: Examples int x = 3; int y = x; // Special syntax for building a String object String s1 = "Hello"; // Building an object the normal way String s2 = new String("Goodbye"); String s3 = s2; String s4 = s3.toUpperCase(); // Result: s4 is "GOODBYE" // Assume you defined a findFastestShip method that // returns a Ship Ship ship1 = new Ship(); Ship ship2 = ship1; Ship ship3 = findFastestShip(); 24 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 12
  • 13. 1/3/2003 Example 3: Constructors class Ship3 { public double x, y, speed, direction; public String name; public Ship3(double x, double y, double speed, double direction, String name) { this.x = x; // "this" differentiates instance vars this.y = y; // from local vars. this.speed = speed; this.direction = direction; this.name = name; } private double degreesToRadians(double degrees) { return(degrees * Math.PI / 180.0); } ... 25 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Constructors (Continued) public void move() { double angle = degreesToRadians(direction); x = x + speed * Math.cos(angle); y = y + speed * Math.sin(angle); } public void printLocation() { System.out.println(name + " is at (" + x + "," + y + ")."); } } public class Test3 { public static void main(String[] args) { Ship3 s1 = new Ship3(0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0, "Ship1"); Ship3 s2 = new Ship3(0.0, 0.0, 2.0, 135.0, "Ship2"); s1.move(); s2.move(); s1.printLocation(); s2.printLocation(); } } 26 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 13
  • 14. 1/3/2003 Constructor Example: Results • Compiling and Running: javac Test3.java java Test3 • Output: Ship1 is at (1,0). Ship2 is at (-1.41421,1.41421). 27 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Example 3: Major Points • Format of constructor definitions • The “this” reference • Destructors (not!) 28 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 14
  • 15. 1/3/2003 Constructors • Constructors are special functions called when a class is created with new – Constructors are especially useful for supplying values of fields – Constructors are declared through: public ClassName(args) { ... } – Notice that the constructor name must exactly match the class name – Constructors have no return type (not even void), unlike a regular method – Java automatically provides a zero-argument constructor if and only if the class doesn’t define it’s own constructor • That’s why you could say Ship1 s1 = new Ship1(); in the first example, even though a constructor was never defined 29 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com The this Variable • The this object reference can be used inside any non-static method to refer to the current object • The common uses of the this reference are: 1. To pass a reference to the current object as a parameter to other methods someMethod(this); 2. To resolve name conflicts • Using this permits the use of instance variables in methods that have local variables with the same name – Note that it is only necessary to say this.fieldName when you have a local variable and a class field with the same name; otherwise just use fieldName with no this 30 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 15
  • 16. 1/3/2003 Destructors This Page Intentionally Left Blank 31 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com Summary • Class names should start with upper case; method names with lower case • Methods must define a return type or void if no result is returned • Access fields via objectName.fieldName • Access methods via objectName.methodName(args) • If a method accepts no arguments, the arg-list in the method declaration is empty instead of void as in C • Static methods do not require an instance of the class; they can be accessed through the class name • The this reference refers to the current object • Class constructors do not declare a return type • Java performs its own memory management and requires no destructors 32 Introduction to Object Oriented Programming www.corewebprogramming.com 16
  • 17. 1/3/2003 core Webprogramming Questions? 33 © 2001-2003 Marty Hall, Larry Brown http://www.corewebprogramming.com 17