Simple question but even though googled it a lot I could not find the answer.
Is it possible to import a class outside a package?
Let's say I have 2 folders A and B with a .java file in each, is it possible by using the clause import to import the class contained in A? import A.Aclass ? or it's mandatory using package syntax whenever there is the keyword import?
Yes it is possible to import the class with the import statement. For better understanding let's assume that you have three folders foldera, folderb and folderc where foldera contains a .java file named "ClassA.java", folderb contains another .java file named "ClassB.java" and folderc contains a .java file named "ClassC.java". Now, if you want to uses the member data and operations of "ClassA.java" in "ClassC.java" you can use the import statement as shown below:
import foldera.ClassA
If you want to use the member data & operations of "ClassB.java" in "ClassC.java" it is also possible with the import statement
import folderb.ClassB
As per the java source file declaration rule, if the class is a part of a package, the package statement must be the first line in the source code file, before any import statements that may be present. In this example, the first line of "ClassC.java" source file must be package folderc since it is located in folderc. Similarly, the first line of "ClassA.java" source file must be package foldera, and the first line of "ClassB.java" source file must be package folderb.
Hope now you are clear with the concept!
Thank you...
Well, if the class is defined to have a package a; then you need to import the class with the package name. If you have two packages which contain a class with the same name, then in your class which needs to invoke each of them, you will need to use a fully-qualified name. For example:
import a.Foo;
import b.Foo;
public class Bar
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
a.Foo aFoo = new a.Foo();
b.Foo bFoo = new b.Foo();
}
}
Alternatively, if you have two packages with classes of the same name, you can simply skip importing them, but rather -- using them by their fully-qualified names (FQN-s).
If the class does not have a package ...;, then simply import it as:
import Foo;
However, if you have two packages (from different libraries) which contain classes with identical FQN-s, then the first one on the classpath will be picked.
Please, bear in mind that the convention for naming packages is to use lowercase letters and for classes -- the name should start with an upper case letter for each word in the class' name.
Yes it is possible.
If you have the following:
Package: PackA
Class: ClasA
Do:
import PackA.ClassA; //Import the class
OR
import PackA.*; //Import all the classes within the package
yes it is possible just import the package
syntax
import pck.ClassA or import pck.*
Yes, you have to use package syntax.
importing all class inside folder A.
import com.pack.A.*;
importing specific class inside folder A.
import com.pack.ClassName;
Related
I'm very new to java I need to use a different features from MAVEN dependencies but they have a same name like this,
import java.nio.file.Files;
import com.google.common.io.Files;
I do not allow me to import. I will throw error like
The import com.google.common.io.Files collides with another import statement
Can this be solved ? Thanks a lot.
When you have to use two classes with the same name, you have to import one and use the fully qualified name of the other one in the code.
For example, leave the first import. And when you want to create one variable of each type, you do the following:
import java.nio.file.Files;
public class MyClass{
Files files; //This variable uses the imported type
com.google.common.io.Files ioFiles; //This variable uses the explicit type
}
Let's say I have this Java class:
package com.version1;
class Sample
{ ... }
And in another Sample class, I want to import the Sample class from com.version1 package:
package com.version2; // Now it's a different package
import com.version1.Sample; // From another package
public class Sample
{...}
Please note: I need to import a class with same name as the current class, not 2 classes with same name.
So the question: Importing two classes with same name. How to handle? is not similar.
You simply can't have two classes referenced by the same short name. So the solution is actually the same one as in the case of importing two classes with the same name:
You'll have to reference the other class by its fully qualified class name and your local one by its short name. You could even use the FQCN for both, if that helps readability in your case.
I have a "Sprites" folder with some class files and a "Launcher" folder with some class files. I tried the following code for import:
package Sprites;
and it lead to the following
hw9\Launcher>javac *.java
TowerDefense.java:2: error: class, interface, or enum expected
package Sprites;
^
1 error
Am I doing this incorrectly? My Sprites and Launcher are in the hw9 directory, so I assumed it would work. A picture for clarification:
You can use a wildcard import to import all classes within the immediate directory:
import Sprites.*;
This opposed to something like:
import Sprites.Class1;
import Sprites.Class2;
import Sprites.Class3;
...
Generally, wildcard imports can produce conflicts and errors (for example java.awt.List and java.util.List), so usually better to avoid them.
Packages should also be lower-cased.
The error is due to syntax, usually when you see something like ...expected that is syntax error indicator.
In the class in your launcher package, include the import statements for the classes which are being referred to.
It should look something like the following:
package the.name.of.your.package;
import Spirites.NameOfclass; //quialify the import parth as is
class YourLauncherClass{
//class definition
}
Also make sure that semicolons aren't missing at the end of import and package.
Hope that helps.
Best practice is to import the specific class you require rather than importing the complete package.
import Spirites.NameOfclassRequired;
class YourClass{
//class definition
}
If you are using eclipse you can do that using CTRL+SHIFT+O When you do that eclipse imports the specific class you require. For an instance if you using an ArrayList rather than importing java.util.*; it will import java.util.ArrayList;
If you need multiple classes from a package then for sure you can import the entire package
I'm not quite sure what I'm doing wrong, here. I have two files in a directory, let's call them FileA.java and FileB.java.
FileA.java has a definition along the lines of:
package com.domain.package;
import stuff;
import package.FileB;
public class FileA extends Blah implements Listener {
/* global vars */
/* methods */
}
FileB.java is my data object class, which I'd like to reference from FileA.java thusly:
Map<Object, FileB> varname;
to be used along the lines of:
varname = new HashMap<Object, FileB>();
FileB.java, on the other hand, is defined as such:
package com.domain.package;
import stuff;
public class FileB {
/* global vars */
public FileB() {
/* stuff */
}
}
Why am I getting:
FileA.java:20: package package does not exist
import package.FileB;
? Rather, how do I make it work?
Because both files are in the same package (com.domain.package), you should not need to import FileB at all. You should be able to reference it directly.
Additionally, please ensure that both FileA and FileB are placed in their package folder: com/domain/package.
The package of FileB is com.domain.package. You are trying to use package.FileB instead.
package is a reserved word, don't use it as part of a package name. If you try to add a package with "package" as part of it in Eclipse, you will get an error message:
Invalid package name. 'package' is not a valid Java identifier
Rename the package, then remove the import statement. You don't need to import a file that's in the same package as the one it's referenced in.
#rgettman has the correct solution. Compiling both files using javac FileA.java FileB.javasolves this issue. You can also use his suggestion: javac *.java
In java parent package class accessible from child packge class? please explain me any one?
example
package A.A1.A2 contains class sub
package A contains class sup
Is there anyway to access sup from sub?
pls explain.
i tried import it won't work
Example:
before the program Directory Structure is
package1 contains package1.java --> package2 --> package3 contains PCheck.java
//package1.java
package package1;
public class package1{
public static void main(String[] args) {
}
}
class phelo{
phelo(){
int a;
System.out.println("hai fun freom package 1");
}
}
//PCheck.java;
package package1.package2.package3;
import package1.*; //to import package1.java
public class PCheck {
public static void main(String[] args) {
phelo obj=new phelo();
}
}
class helo{
helo(){
int a;
System.out.println("hai fun from package 3");
}
}
output:
compile time error:package package1.package2.package3 doesnot exist;
for import class from different directory we use import statements but here we need access parent package from subpackage.i tried import it won't work pls explain with an example.
Java does not recognize the notion of a subpackage1. As far as Java is concerned packages a and a.b and a.b.c are unrelated. They are just names.
So, if you want to access a.b.SomeClass from a.b.c.SomeOtherClass, you must either use a fully qualified class name, or add an import to SomeOtherClass
1 - From Java 9 onwards you can use modules to implement abstraction boundaries that are larger than a single package. This doesn't address this question which is about package-private access, but it could be viewed as an alternative to package-private.
As for your example that doesn't compile, I think we need a proper MCVE to understand that. My guess is that you have gotten the file organization for your source tree wrong ...
It is also possible that the problem is that the visibility of the class you are trying to import is wrong (package private), but that wouldn't cause the compiler to say that the package doesn't exist, like you said it does.
In java parent package class
accessible from child packge class?
please explain me any one?
Not the way you're thinking. The directories are hierarchical, but the packages are just distinguishing names.
If a child needs a parent package, or any other outside its hierarchy, it simply needs to import it.
That's why import foo.* doesn't give you access to all sub-package names - packages aren't hierarchical the way directories are.
All answers seem to miss OP's point on package class as everyone seem to suggest importing the class as a workaround.
The answer is: package-level classes (i.e., without explicit access level modifier), are visible ONLY for the EXACT same package.
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/accesscontrol.html
If a class has no modifier (the default, also known as package-private), it is visible only within its own package
This effectively means that neither parent/child/external packages can view the class.
In object of a.b.c.SomeOtherClass:
List<String> tmp=new ArrayList<String>(Arrays.asList(this.getClass().getPackage().getName().split("\\.")));
tmp.remove(tmp.size()-1);
String parent_package_name=tmp.toString().replace(", ", ".").replaceAll("[\\[\\]]", "");
Class cls=Class.forName(parent_package_name+".SomeClass");
Simply import it:
import A.sup;
Yes I have encountered the same error whenever I tried to access a class in the same package of the source file or the parent package of the source file it is generating a compiled time error , so by trial and error method I came to the conclusion that the packages are not built in a way to support main methods in the classes and they are not built in a way to support importing their parent packages or child packages
default class can be only used within package except subpackage