Why should I declare implemented interface methods as "public"? - java

interface Rideable {
String getGait();
}
public class Camel implements Rideable {
int weight = 2;
String getGait() {
return " mph, lope";
}
void go(int speed) {++speed;
weight++;
int walkrate = speed * weight;
System.out.print(walkrate + getGait());
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new Camel().go(8);
}
}
Upon compiling the above code I've got a compilation error, related to access modifier of getGait() method. Please explain, why should I declare getGait() with public access modifier?

getGait() of Camel implements a method of the Rideable interface. All interface methods are public by default (even if you don't specify it explicitly in the interface definition), so all implementing methods must be public too, since you can't reduce the visibility of the interface method.

In the interface you have method getGait() declared as public. Even you do not state a method as a public in interface it is public.
But in your class, you have declared this method as package private. It is not allowed, because it reduces the visibility of the implemented method.
To avoid this problem. either declare this method as public in your class, or remove declaration (implements Rideable) that your class implements the interface with this method signature.

According object oriented fundamentals, interface contains only public methods. so when you implements interface, you should declare it as a public , otherwise it give you compile time error.
Thanks.

One of the basic usage of interfaces can be to check conformance.For example a class implementing Comparable interface must provide compareTo method and hence providing a mechanism to compare objects of the class.
The reason these methods being public makes sense is that any class which utilizes this conformance must be able to use these methods without any restriction.For example sort method of Arrays class will be good enough to sort objects of a class only if it implements Comparable and exposes the compareTo method(If thats the mechanism you want to provide for sorting.Of course Comparator is also there). So in a nutshell, a contract is only good enough if its readable or usable in case of interfaces(thus making methods public imperative).

In Interface, the fields are implicitly public static final and the methods in an interface are by default public.
Please read the rules of Inheritance:
http://www.codejava.net/java-core/the-java-language/12-rules-of-overriding-in-java-you-should-know
One of which says, "The overriding method must not have more restrictive access modifier". So you are ovveriding the getGait() in Camel class. If you do not provide the access modifier in methods of class then by defaults its default. Which mean you are restricting the access modifier from public to default. Hence breaking the rule of ovveriding which is why its complaining.

Related

why Java 8 interface static methods cannot override Object class methods [duplicate]

I'm confused why the following is not allowed:
public interface MyInterface {
MyInterface getInstance(String name);
}
public class MyImplementation implements MyInterface {
public MyImplementation(String name) {
}
#Override
public static MyInterface getInstance(String name) { // static is not allowed here
return new MyImplementation(name)
}
}
I understand why a method in the interface cannot be static, but why can't the overriding method be?
I want all classes to implement the getInstance(String name) method, but I'm currently limited to only being able to call the method if the object has already been instantiated which kind of defeats the purpose...
*update:* Thanks for the answers, I understand it better now. Basically I shouldn't be trying to make a utility class (or a factory class for that matter) implement an interface (or at least, not in this way)...
Invoking static methods in Java requires you to specify the exact type. It is not possible to invoke static methods polymorphically, eliminating the need for #Override.
Please note that this approach is not universal across all languages: for example, you can override class methods in Objective-C, and Apple's cocoa frameworks make good use of this mechanism to customize their "factory" classes. However, in Java, C++, and C# class methods do not support polymorphic behavior.
Theoretically, Java designers could have let you provide interface method implementations through static methods in case an implementation does not need to access the state from the instance. But the same behavior is simple to achieve with a trivial wrapper:
public class MyImplementation implements MyInterface {
public MyImplementation(String name) {
}
#Override
public MyInterface getInstance() { // static is not allowed here
return getInstanceImpl();
}
public static getInstanceImpl() {
return new MyImplementation(name)
}
}
Java compiler could have done the same thing on your behalf, but seeing a static method implement an instance method is both unusual and confusing, so my guess is that Java designers decided against providing this "piece of magic".
Static methods cannot be subject to polymorphic behavior. That would not make much sense. Image this use case, assuming what you want would be possible:
public void foo(MyInterface i) {
i.getInstance("abc");
}
now I want to call this method with an implementation of MyInterface (class A), but since I cannot pass the class itself, I need to pass an object:
A a = new A();
foo(a);
now inside foo the static override of getInstance is called on the instance of class A. So now I am stuck with creating an object just to call a static method.
My point is that you would still be constrained to create an object in most use cases of polymorphism since in your original interface the method was an instance method.
because implementing an interface makes the implementor the type of the interface. That means instances need to have the methods defined by the type, not the class of the instances.
To put it another way,
public void mymethod
and
public static void mymethod
are NOT the same method declaration. They are completely distinct. If mymethod is defined on an interface, having the second definition simply does not satisfy implementing the interface.
The answer comes down to what it means to implement an interface. When a class implements an interface, that is a promise that every instance of the class will respond to every method in the interface. When you implement the method as static, you make it possible to call the method without an instance of the class - but that doesn't fulfill the inheritance implementation's promise that the method will be callable on every instance of the class.

Why Interface methods cannot be "static" & "final"?

In Java Interface, we can have only final variables possible. We can also create static variables in Interface. But, at the same time we are not able to create static/final methods as Interface are only meant for Static Methods.
What is exactly the reason for not allowing static/final methods in Interface ?
A final method can't be overridden. That defies the purpose of having an interface if you cannot actually implement the method.
For the static part, see this question.
You got it wrong.
All variables are implicitly public static and final in interfaces.
Prior to Java 8, you can't create static methods in interfaces. All methods are instance methods.
Since the only goal of an interface is to have classes implementing them, and since methods in interfaces can't have any implementation, making them final would make no sense: they would have no implementation, and could not be overridden.
Interfaces are defined for instances, not statics.
"final" means "can't be overridden". That makes no sense for an interface whatsoever.
final means that it cannot be overriden.
static means that it can only be called using the class name. Since an interface will have multiple implementations, how will you know which implementation to choose since the interface cannot implement the method itself?
Because they are there in an interface to be implemented by some class. What would be the point of a method that can not have an implementation anywhere? (which is what final would suggest)
I have one more point to prove why interface methods can not be static :
interface MyInterface {
static void myStaticMethod();
}
Now let's have two classes are implementing "MyInterface"
// first class
class MyClass1 implements MyInterface {
static void myStaticMethod(){
// some implementation
}
}
// second class
class MyClass2 implements MyInterface {
static void myStaticMethod(){
// some implementation
}
}
Now I am instantiating like below:
1- MyInterface myObj1 = new MyClass1();
2- myObj1.myStaticMethod();
3- MyInterface myObj2 = new MyClass2();
4- myObj2.myStaticMethod();
// here at line 2 & 4 , it's wrong calling as myStaticMethod should be called using class name(because myStaticMethod is defined as static) like below:
MyInterface.myStaticMethod();--> But in this case,how to call different implementations of myStaticMethod() by MyClass1 & MyClass2 classes.
So it's proved that static can not be possible in interface method declaration.
For final ,it's quite clear that it will opposite to override functionality.
An interface is a pure abstract class. Hence, all methods in an interface are abtract, and must be implemented in the child classes. So, by extension, none of them can be declared as final.
Why Interface methods cannot be “static” & “final”?
All methods in an interface are explicitly abstract and hence you cannot define them as static or final because static or final methods cannot be abstract.
In the context of Java 8 and default methods, this question has a new meaning. static methods are now allowed, and why final methods still aren't possible is explained in this question.
1: we can't declare a final method ,because it contradicts it's rule as final method can't be override,but always need to define all the interface methods in it implemented classes.
2: we can't declare a static method ,because it contradicts it's rule as static method always needs the method body but we cant define any method inside a interface.
Well static methods work on classes and not instances so kind of strange/pointless. Having said that I've for one reason or another wanted this in some situations, though can't remember a case now so must have been long ago.
You can "work around" this though (rather alternative api design) as interfaces allow you to declare classes, so something like this:
interface MyInterface {
static class Helpers {
static void myStaticMethod(); //can be abstract etc as usual
}
}
You can subclass that class etc as normal of course, as well make it abstract, abstract methods etc etc.
We can not declare method of interface as static because method of interface instance method and we can not declare final because it is necessory to override method of interface in implemented class. for description check this link enter link description here
By default all the methods present inside an interface are public and abstract. If you declair a method as final inside an interface 1st of all you will get a compiler error and not even then it doesn't make any sense to have a final method because you will never be in a position to override it in child class.
In case of static even if Java allow in what so ever version it's not a good programming practice to use static inside an interface because for static methods u must have to provide the implementation which you must not provide inside an interface. Moreover, even if you provide the implementation inside an interface still u have to override it and then have to call it by the class name.
Interface cant have static method because if you know the static property that method declared static can be called without creating any object of class and sttaic methods are part of class not instance of class, so the answer is that how can you call abstract method till java 7, In java 8 you can declare method as static and call it by interface name dot method name.
Now answer fo final is that , final method is not overriden so how you will override it when class will inherit it
why can't we make Interface methods final?
because if you make a method final then you can not override it and the sole purpose of Interface is to have methods that will be overridden by all those class that implements that Interface.
why can't we make Interface methods static?
In Java 8 it's possible, you can make methods static but that method should have a method body
interface Test{
static void hello(){
System.out.println(“hello world”);
}
}
and you can access this method from a class implementing this Interface by
Test.hello();

Why should we declare interface methods as public? [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Protected in Interfaces
(15 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
When I implement an interface method, I am forced to make it a public method.
We may have cases where we want to use either the default (like in case of access within the same package) or protected.
Can anyone please explain the reason behind this limitation?
Interfaces are meant to define the public API of a type - and only that, not its implementation. So any method (or static member) you define in an interface is by definition public.
Since an interface can't contain any concrete implementation, there is no way to call any member methods from within. And declaring such methods but leaving the calls to them to subclasses or totally unrelated clients would mean your type definition is incomplete and brittle. That is why if you need to define protected or package access members, you can do so in an abstract class (which may also contain implementation).
Maybe this will provide some answers.
To my knowledge, you use interfaces to allow people from outside your code to interact with your code. To do this, you need to define your methods public.
If you would like to force someone to override a given set of private methods, you might want to declare an abstract class with a series of abstract protected methods.
An interface is a contract that the class that implements it will have the methods in the interface. The interface is used to show the rest of the program that this class has the methods and that they could be called
EDIT: This answer is meant for C# interface implementations. In this case of Java the scenario is similar just that the syntactic analyzer wants a public keyword mentioned in the interface, which is implicitly done in C#
Interface methods are implicitly public in C# because an interface is a contract meant to be used by other classes. In addition, you must declare these methods to be public, and not static, when you implement the interface.
interface IStorable
{
void Read( );
void Write(object obj);
}
Notice that the IStorable method declarations for Read( ) and Write( ) do not include access modifiers (public, protected ..). In fact, providing an access modifier generates a compile error.
class Document : IStorable
{
public void Read( )
{
//
}
public void Write(object obj)
{
//
}
}
Just think about interfaces as Contracts to be implemented as public
If we mark a interface method as private the implementing class wont
see the method and cant override it.
If we mark a interface method as protected the implementing class
wont see the method unless it is in the same package as the
interface.
If we mark a interface method without any access modifier the
implementing class wont see the method unless it is in the same
package as the interface

Different rules for abstract methods in abstract class and interface

We cannot declare abstract methods in interface as protected and default (even if we don't mention any access specifier (default) compiler takes it as public)
but we can declare abstract method in abstract class as protected and default.
Why there are different rules for abstract class and interface?
Because abstract methods of abstract classes are meant to be hooks for subclasses. On the other hand interfaces are not concerned with implementation details - they are only about contracts with the "outside world". And a protected method is an implementation detail.
we cannot declare abstract methods in interface as protected and defaul
the purpose of Interface is to just declare contract. your client will implement it and for that it must be public.
also field in interface are public static final by default,
public you got ,static because it can't be instantiated without implementation and it must not be inherited also.
Update:
as per your question
you want to apply some strict constraint which your implementor can't see ..then what is the use of abstract method in abstract class that must be implemented by any concrete class in the inheritance hierarchy...then no one will be concrete class
public class BaseAbstractClass {
private Connection getConnection(){
//somecode
}
public boolean save(){
//get connection and do something
//return ;
}
//your implementor is left to implement it , he can use save method but can'ge see what it does i mean i doesn't have access to getConnection
public abstract void saveEntity();
}

Why can't I define a static method in a Java interface?

EDIT: As of Java 8, static methods are now allowed in interfaces.
Here's the example:
public interface IXMLizable<T>
{
static T newInstanceFromXML(Element e);
Element toXMLElement();
}
Of course this won't work. But why not?
One of the possible issues would be, what happens when you call:
IXMLizable.newInstanceFromXML(e);
In this case, I think it should just call an empty method (i.e. {}). All subclasses would be forced to implement the static method, so they'd all be fine when calling the static method. So why isn't this possible?
EDIT: I guess I'm looking for answer that's deeper than "because that's the way Java is".
Is there a particular technological reason why static methods can't be overwritten? That is, why did the designers of Java decide to make instance methods overrideable but not static methods?
EDIT: The problem with my design is I'm trying to use interfaces to enforce a coding convention.
That is, the goal of the interface is twofold:
I want the IXMLizable interface to allow me to convert classes that implement it to XML elements (using polymorphism, works fine).
If someone wants to make a new instance of a class that implements the IXMLizable interface, they will always know that there will be a newInstanceFromXML(Element e) static constructor.
Is there any other way to ensure this, other than just putting a comment in the interface?
Java 8 permits static interface methods
With Java 8, interfaces can have static methods. They can also have concrete instance methods, but not instance fields.
There are really two questions here:
Why, in the bad old days, couldn't interfaces contain static methods?
Why can't static methods be overridden?
Static methods in interfaces
There was no strong technical reason why interfaces couldn't have had static methods in previous versions. This is summed up nicely by the poster of a duplicate question. Static interface methods were initially considered as a small language change, and then there was an official proposal to add them in Java 7, but it was later dropped due to unforeseen complications.
Finally, Java 8 introduced static interface methods, as well as override-able instance methods with a default implementation. They still can't have instance fields though. These features are part of the lambda expression support, and you can read more about them in Part H of JSR 335.
Overriding static methods
The answer to the second question is a little more complicated.
Static methods are resolvable at compile time. Dynamic dispatch makes sense for instance methods, where the compiler can't determine the concrete type of the object, and, thus, can't resolve the method to invoke. But invoking a static method requires a class, and since that class is known statically—at compile time—dynamic dispatch is unnecessary.
A little background on how instance methods work is necessary to understand what's going on here. I'm sure the actual implementation is quite different, but let me explain my notion of method dispatch, which models observed behavior accurately.
Pretend that each class has a hash table that maps method signatures (name and parameter types) to an actual chunk of code to implement the method. When the virtual machine attempts to invoke a method on an instance, it queries the object for its class and looks up the requested signature in the class's table. If a method body is found, it is invoked. Otherwise, the parent class of the class is obtained, and the lookup is repeated there. This proceeds until the method is found, or there are no more parent classes—which results in a NoSuchMethodError.
If a superclass and a subclass both have an entry in their tables for the same method signature, the sub class's version is encountered first, and the superclass's version is never used—this is an "override".
Now, suppose we skip the object instance and just start with a subclass. The resolution could proceed as above, giving you a sort of "overridable" static method. The resolution can all happen at compile-time, however, since the compiler is starting from a known class, rather than waiting until runtime to query an object of an unspecified type for its class. There is no point in "overriding" a static method since one can always specify the class that contains the desired version.
Constructor "interfaces"
Here's a little more material to address the recent edit to the question.
It sounds like you want to effectively mandate a constructor-like method for each implementation of IXMLizable. Forget about trying to enforce this with an interface for a minute, and pretend that you have some classes that meet this requirement. How would you use it?
class Foo implements IXMLizable<Foo> {
public static Foo newInstanceFromXML(Element e) { ... }
}
Foo obj = Foo.newInstanceFromXML(e);
Since you have to explicitly name the concrete type Foo when "constructing" the new object, the compiler can verify that it does indeed have the necessary factory method. And if it doesn't, so what? If I can implement an IXMLizable that lacks the "constructor", and I create an instance and pass it to your code, it is an IXMLizable with all the necessary interface.
Construction is part of the implementation, not the interface. Any code that works successfully with the interface doesn't care about the constructor. Any code that cares about the constructor needs to know the concrete type anyway, and the interface can be ignored.
This was already asked and answered, here
To duplicate my answer:
There is never a point to declaring a static method in an interface. They cannot be executed by the normal call MyInterface.staticMethod(). If you call them by specifying the implementing class MyImplementor.staticMethod() then you must know the actual class, so it is irrelevant whether the interface contains it or not.
More importantly, static methods are never overridden, and if you try to do:
MyInterface var = new MyImplementingClass();
var.staticMethod();
the rules for static say that the method defined in the declared type of var must be executed. Since this is an interface, this is impossible.
The reason you can't execute "result=MyInterface.staticMethod()" is that it would have to execute the version of the method defined in MyInterface. But there can't be a version defined in MyInterface, because it's an interface. It doesn't have code by definition.
While you can say that this amounts to "because Java does it that way", in reality the decision is a logical consequence of other design decisions, also made for very good reason.
With the advent of Java 8 it is possible now to write default and static methods in interface.
docs.oracle/staticMethod
For example:
public interface Arithmetic {
public int add(int a, int b);
public static int multiply(int a, int b) {
return a * b;
}
}
public class ArithmaticImplementation implements Arithmetic {
#Override
public int add(int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
int result = Arithmetic.multiply(2, 3);
System.out.println(result);
}
}
Result : 6
TIP : Calling an static interface method doesn't require to be implemented by any class. Surely, this happens because the same rules for static methods in superclasses applies for static methods on interfaces.
Normally this is done using a Factory pattern
public interface IXMLizableFactory<T extends IXMLizable> {
public T newInstanceFromXML(Element e);
}
public interface IXMLizable {
public Element toXMLElement();
}
Because static methods cannot be overridden in subclasses, and hence they cannot be abstract. And all methods in an interface are, de facto, abstract.
Why can't I define a static method in a Java interface?
Actually you can in Java 8.
As per Java doc:
A static method is a method that is associated with the class in which
it is defined rather than with any object. Every instance of the class
shares its static methods
In Java 8 an interface can have default methods and static methods. This makes it easier for us to organize helper methods in our libraries. We can keep static methods specific to an interface in the same interface rather than in a separate class.
Example of default method:
list.sort(ordering);
instead of
Collections.sort(list, ordering);
Example of static method (from doc itself):
public interface TimeClient {
// ...
static public ZoneId getZoneId (String zoneString) {
try {
return ZoneId.of(zoneString);
} catch (DateTimeException e) {
System.err.println("Invalid time zone: " + zoneString +
"; using default time zone instead.");
return ZoneId.systemDefault();
}
}
default public ZonedDateTime getZonedDateTime(String zoneString) {
return ZonedDateTime.of(getLocalDateTime(), getZoneId(zoneString));
}
}
Interfaces are concerned with polymorphism which is inherently tied to object instances, not classes. Therefore static doesn't make sense in the context of an interface.
First, all language decisions are decisions made by the language creators. There is nothing in the world of software engineering or language defining or compiler / interpreter writing which says that a static method cannot be part of an interface. I've created a couple of languages and written compilers for them -- it's all just sitting down and defining meaningful semantics. I'd argue that the semantics of a static method in an interface are remarkably clear -- even if the compiler has to defer resolution of the method to run-time.
Secondly, that we use static methods at all means there is a valid reason for having an interface pattern which includes static methods -- I can't speak for any of you, but I use static methods on a regular basis.
The most likely correct answer is that there was no perceived need, at the time the language was defined, for static methods in interfaces. Java has grown a lot over the years and this is an item that has apparently gained some interest. That it was looked at for Java 7 indicates that its risen to a level of interest that might result in a language change. I, for one, will be happy when I no longer have to instantiate an object just so I can call my non-static getter method to access a static variable in a subclass instance ...
"Is there a particular reason that static methods cannot be overridden".
Let me re-word that question for your by filling in the definitions.
"Is there a particular reason that methods resolved at compile time cannot be resolved at runtime."
Or, to put in more completely, If I want to call a method without an instance, but knowing the class, how can I have it resolved based upon the instance that I don't have.
Static methods aren't virtual like instance methods so I suppose the Java designers decided they didn't want them in interfaces.
But you can put classes containing static methods inside interfaces. You could try that!
public interface Test {
static class Inner {
public static Object get() {
return 0;
}
}
}
Commenting EDIT: As of Java 8, static methods are now allowed in interfaces.
It is right, static methods since Java 8 are allowed in interfaces, but your example still won't work. You cannot just define a static method: you have to implement it or you will obtain a compilation error.
Several answers have discussed the problems with the concept of overridable static methods. However sometimes you come across a pattern where it seems like that's just what you want to use.
For example, I work with an object-relational layer that has value objects, but also has commands for manipulating the value objects. For various reasons, each value object class has to define some static methods that let the framework find the command instance. For example, to create a Person you'd do:
cmd = createCmd(Person.getCreateCmdId());
Person p = cmd.execute();
and to load a Person by ID you'd do
cmd = createCmd(Person.getGetCmdId());
cmd.set(ID, id);
Person p = cmd.execute();
This is fairly convenient, however it has its problems; notably the existence of the static methods can not be enforced in the interface. An overridable static method in the interface would be exactly what we'd need, if only it could work somehow.
EJBs solve this problem by having a Home interface; each object knows how to find its Home and the Home contains the "static" methods. This way the "static" methods can be overridden as needed, and you don't clutter up the normal (it's called "Remote") interface with methods that don't apply to an instance of your bean. Just make the normal interface specify a "getHome()" method. Return an instance of the Home object (which could be a singleton, I suppose) and the caller can perform operations that affect all Person objects.
Why can't I define a static method in a Java interface?
All methods in an interface are explicitly abstract and hence you cannot define them as static because static methods cannot be abstract.
Well, without generics, static interfaces are useless because all static method calls are resolved at compile time. So, there's no real use for them.
With generics, they have use -- with or without a default implementation. Obviously there would need to be overriding and so on. However, my guess is that such usage wasn't very OO (as the other answers point out obtusely) and hence wasn't considered worth the effort they'd require to implement usefully.
An interface can never be dereferenced statically, e.g. ISomething.member. An interface is always dereferenced via a variable that refers to an instance of a subclass of the interface. Thus, an interface reference can never know which subclass it refers to without an instance of its subclass.
Thus the closest approximation to a static method in an interface would be a non-static method that ignores "this", i.e. does not access any non-static members of the instance. At the low-level abstraction, every non-static method (after lookup in any vtable) is really just a function with class scope that takes "this" as an implicit formal parameter. See Scala's singleton object and interoperability with Java as evidence of that concept.
And thus every static method is a function with class scope that does not take a "this" parameter. Thus normally a static method can be called statically, but as previously stated, an interface has no implementation (is abstract).
Thus to get closest approximation to a static method in an interface, is to use a non-static method, then don't access any of the non-static instance members. There would be no possible performance benefit any other way, because there is no way to statically link (at compile-time) a ISomething.member(). The only benefit I see of a static method in an interface is that it would not input (i.e. ignore) an implicit "this" and thus disallow access to any of the non-static instance members. This would declare implicitly that the function that doesn't access "this", is immutate and not even readonly with respect to its containing class. But a declaration of "static" in an interface ISomething would also confuse people who tried to access it with ISomething.member() which would cause a compiler error. I suppose if the compiler error was sufficiently explanatory, it would be better than trying to educate people about using a non-static method to accomplish what they want (apparently mostly factory methods), as we are doing here (and has been repeated for 3 Q&A times on this site), so it is obviously an issue that is not intuitive for many people. I had to think about it for a while to get the correct understanding.
The way to get a mutable static field in an interface is use non-static getter and setter methods in an interface, to access that static field that in the subclass. Sidenote, apparently immutable statics can be declared in a Java interface with static final.
Interfaces just provide a list of things a class will provide, not an actual implementation of those things, which is what your static item is.
If you want statics, use an abstract class and inherit it, otherwise, remove the static.
Hope that helps!
You can't define static methods in an interface because static methods belongs to a class not to an instance of class, and interfaces are not Classes. Read more here.
However, If you want you can do this:
public class A {
public static void methodX() {
}
}
public class B extends A {
public static void methodX() {
}
}
In this case what you have is two classes with 2 distinct static methods called methodX().
Suppose you could do it; consider this example:
interface Iface {
public static void thisIsTheMethod();
}
class A implements Iface {
public static void thisIsTheMethod(){
system.out.print("I'm class A");
}
}
class B extends Class A {
public static void thisIsTheMethod(){
System.out.print("I'm class B");
}
}
SomeClass {
void doStuff(Iface face) {
IFace.thisIsTheMethod();
// now what would/could/should happen here.
}
}
Something that could be implemented is static interface (instead of static method in an interface). All classes implementing a given static interface should implement the corresponding static methods. You could get static interface SI from any Class clazz using
SI si = clazz.getStatic(SI.class); // null if clazz doesn't implement SI
// alternatively if the class is known at compile time
SI si = Someclass.static.SI; // either compiler errror or not null
then you can call si.method(params).
This would be useful (for factory design pattern for example) because you can get (or check the implementation of) SI static methods implementation from a compile time unknown class !
A dynamic dispatch is necessary and you can override the static methods (if not final) of a class by extending it (when called through the static interface).
Obviously, these methods can only access static variables of their class.
While I realize that Java 8 resolves this issue, I thought I'd chime in with a scenario I am currently working on (locked into using Java 7) where being able to specify static methods in an interface would be helpful.
I have several enum definitions where I've defined "id" and "displayName" fields along with helper methods evaluating the values for various reasons. Implementing an interface allows me to ensure that the getter methods are in place but not the static helper methods. Being an enum, there really isn't a clean way to offload the helper methods into an inherited abstract class or something of the like so the methods have to be defined in the enum itself. Also because it is an enum, you wouldn't ever be able to actually pass it as an instanced object and treat it as the interface type, but being able to require the existence of the static helper methods through an interface is what I like about it being supported in Java 8.
Here's code illustrating my point.
Interface definition:
public interface IGenericEnum <T extends Enum<T>> {
String getId();
String getDisplayName();
//If I was using Java 8 static helper methods would go here
}
Example of one enum definition:
public enum ExecutionModeType implements IGenericEnum<ExecutionModeType> {
STANDARD ("Standard", "Standard Mode"),
DEBUG ("Debug", "Debug Mode");
String id;
String displayName;
//Getter methods
public String getId() {
return id;
}
public String getDisplayName() {
return displayName;
}
//Constructor
private ExecutionModeType(String id, String displayName) {
this.id = id;
this.displayName = displayName;
}
//Helper methods - not enforced by Interface
public static boolean isValidId(String id) {
return GenericEnumUtility.isValidId(ExecutionModeType.class, id);
}
public static String printIdOptions(String delimiter){
return GenericEnumUtility.printIdOptions(ExecutionModeType.class, delimiter);
}
public static String[] getIdArray(){
return GenericEnumUtility.getIdArray(ExecutionModeType.class);
}
public static ExecutionModeType getById(String id) throws NoSuchObjectException {
return GenericEnumUtility.getById(ExecutionModeType.class, id);
}
}
Generic enum utility definition:
public class GenericEnumUtility {
public static <T extends Enum<T> & IGenericEnum<T>> boolean isValidId(Class<T> enumType, String id) {
for(IGenericEnum<T> enumOption : enumType.getEnumConstants()) {
if(enumOption.getId().equals(id)) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
public static <T extends Enum<T> & IGenericEnum<T>> String printIdOptions(Class<T> enumType, String delimiter){
String ret = "";
delimiter = delimiter == null ? " " : delimiter;
int i = 0;
for(IGenericEnum<T> enumOption : enumType.getEnumConstants()) {
if(i == 0) {
ret = enumOption.getId();
} else {
ret += delimiter + enumOption.getId();
}
i++;
}
return ret;
}
public static <T extends Enum<T> & IGenericEnum<T>> String[] getIdArray(Class<T> enumType){
List<String> idValues = new ArrayList<String>();
for(IGenericEnum<T> enumOption : enumType.getEnumConstants()) {
idValues.add(enumOption.getId());
}
return idValues.toArray(new String[idValues.size()]);
}
#SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
public static <T extends Enum<T> & IGenericEnum<T>> T getById(Class<T> enumType, String id) throws NoSuchObjectException {
id = id == null ? "" : id;
for(IGenericEnum<T> enumOption : enumType.getEnumConstants()) {
if(id.equals(enumOption.getId())) {
return (T)enumOption;
}
}
throw new NoSuchObjectException(String.format("ERROR: \"%s\" is not a valid ID. Valid IDs are: %s.", id, printIdOptions(enumType, " , ")));
}
}
Let's suppose static methods were allowed in interfaces:
* They would force all implementing classes to declare that method.
* Interfaces would usually be used through objects, so the only effective methods on those would be the non-static ones.
* Any class which knows a particular interface could invoke its static methods. Hence a implementing class' static method would be called underneath, but the invoker class does not know which. How to know it? It has no instantiation to guess that!
Interfaces were thought to be used when working with objects. This way, an object is instantiated from a particular class, so this last matter is solved. The invoking class need not know which particular class is because the instantiation may be done by a third class. So the invoking class knows only the interface.
If we want this to be extended to static methods, we should have the possibility to especify an implementing class before, then pass a reference to the invoking class. This could use the class through the static methods in the interface. But what is the differente between this reference and an object? We just need an object representing what it was the class. Now, the object represents the old class, and could implement a new interface including the old static methods - those are now non-static.
Metaclasses serve for this purpose. You may try the class Class of Java. But the problem is that Java is not flexible enough for this. You can not declare a method in the class object of an interface.
This is a meta issue - when you need to do ass
..blah blah
anyway you have an easy workaround - making the method non-static with the same logic. But then you would have to first create an object to call the method.
To solve this :
error: missing method body, or declare abstract
static void main(String[] args);
interface I
{
int x=20;
void getValue();
static void main(String[] args){};//Put curly braces
}
class InterDemo implements I
{
public void getValue()
{
System.out.println(x);
}
public static void main(String[] args)
{
InterDemo i=new InterDemo();
i.getValue();
}
}
output :
20
Now we can use static method in interface
I think java does not have static interface methods because you do not need them. You may think you do, but...
How would you use them? If you want to call them like
MyImplClass.myMethod()
then you do not need to declare it in the interface. If you want to call them like
myInstance.myMethod()
then it should not be static.
If you are actually going to use first way, but just want to enforce each implementation to have such static method, then it is really a coding convention, not a contract between instance that implements an interface and calling code.
Interfaces allow you to define contract between instance of class that implement the interface and calling code. And java helps you to be sure that this contract is not violated, so you can rely on it and don't worry what class implements this contract, just "someone who signed a contract" is enough. In case of static interfaces your code
MyImplClass.myMethod()
does not rely on the fact that each interface implementation has this method, so you do not need java to help you to be sure with it.
What is the need of static method in interface, static methods are used basically when you don't have to create an instance of object whole idea of interface is to bring in OOP concepts with introduction of static method you're diverting from concept.

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