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Object Oriented Programming CSC 171 FALL 2001 LECTURE 11.

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Presentation on theme: "Object Oriented Programming CSC 171 FALL 2001 LECTURE 11."— Presentation transcript:

1 Object Oriented Programming CSC 171 FALL 2001 LECTURE 11

2 History: ENIAC Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer 1943 – 1947 Work on ENIAC at the Univ. of Pennsylvania John Mauchly & J. Presper Eckert. The world's first electronic digital computer was developed to compute World War II ballistic firing tables.

3 Computer Science What is computer science?

4 Computer Science “fundamentally, computer science is the science of abstraction – creating the right model for a problem and devising the appropriate mechanizable technique to solve it.” - A. Aho and J. Ullman

5 Acts of mind - Locke “The acts of the mind, wherein it exerts its power over simple ideas, are chiefly these three:

6 Aggregation 1. Combining several simple ideas into one compound one, and thus all complex ideas are made

7 Comparision 2. The second is brining two ideas, where simple or complex, together, and setting them by one another so as to take aview of them at once,without uniting them into one, by which it gets all its ideas of relations.

8 Abstraction 3. The third is separating them from all other ideas that accompany them in their real existence: this is called abstraction, and thus all general ideas are made.” John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, (1690)

9 Object Orientation Objects are the means of aggregation and abstraction, in an OO programming language Aggregation – bundling data elements Abstraction - inheritance

10 Data Encapulation OOP encapulates – data – behavior

11 Interfaces We define systems in terms of many objects – Each type of object has certain behaviors methods – Each object has certain data Instance variables Objects communicate with other via well defined interfaces

12 Information Hiding When we design objects which communicate exclusively via interfaces - we insulate (abstract) the outward functionality from the inward implementation. This insulation is the principle of information hiding – the inward details of the implementation are hidden from the outside objects

13 Benefits of Information Hiding Information hiding promotes program modifiability. Clients are not required to know the internals of a class in order to use it. So, if the class changes inside, then the client need not be changed The client and the object are said to be “loosely coupled”

14 Example – A bank account

15 A specific instance

16 Multiple instances

17 Bank Account - behaviors public class BankAccount { private double balance; public BankAccount() { balance = 0; } public BankAccount(double initialBalance){ balance = initialBalance; } public void deposit(double amount){ balance = balance + amount; } public void withdraw(double amount){ balance = balance - amount; } public double getBalance(){return balance;} }

18 this Java conserves storage by maintaining only one copy of each method per class The same method is invoked by every object Every object has its own copy of its instance variables Every object, by default has a reference to itself – “this” is the name of every object’s reference to itself

19 Bank Account - this public class BankAccount { private double balance; public BankAccount() { this.balance = 0; } public BankAccount(double balance){ this.balance = balance; } public void deposit(double amount){ this.balance = this.balance + amount; } public void withdraw(double amount){ this.balance = this.balance - amount; } public double getBalance(){ return this.balance;} }

20 Sometimes, classes share Consider a variation of the BankAccount public class BankAccount {.... private double balance; private int accountNumber; // we want to assign sequential numbers }

21 Sharing data between objects of the same class We want to set the account number automatically public class BankAccount { private double balance; private int accountNumber; private int lastAssignedNumber = 0; //Will this work? public BankAccount() { lastAssignedNumber++; accountNumber = lastAssignedNumber; //??????? }

22 Static/class variables We don’t want each instance of the class to have its own value for lastAssignedNumber We need to have a single value that is the same for the entire class. These are called class or static variables

23 Sharing data between objects of the same class We want to set the account number automatically public class BankAccount { private double balance; private int accountNumber; private static int lastAssignedNumber = 0; public BankAccount() { lastAssignedNumber++; accountNumber = lastAssignedNumber; }

24

25 Finally Some types of variables are fixed constants, that we do not want to change Like conversion factors We can use the keyword “final” to prevent changes So we have a “constant variable” Sort of like – “jumbo shrimp” – “freezer burn”

26 Classes share constants Consider a variation of the BankAccount public class Converter { private final static double miles2km = 0.6; }


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