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Chapter 7 Classes and Methods III: Static Methods and Variables Lecture Slides to Accompany An Introduction to Computer Science Using Java (2nd Edition)

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 Classes and Methods III: Static Methods and Variables Lecture Slides to Accompany An Introduction to Computer Science Using Java (2nd Edition)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 Classes and Methods III: Static Methods and Variables Lecture Slides to Accompany An Introduction to Computer Science Using Java (2nd Edition) by S.N. Kamin, D. Mickunas, E. Reingold

2 Chapter Preview In this chapter we will: describe user-defined classes –instance variables –constructors –instance methods present several examples of classes discuss the concepts of mutability and visibility describe method overloading

3 Object-Oriented Programming OOP supports the view that programs are composed of interacting objects Objects are composed of –values known as attributes or instance variables –operations (actions) that can be performed on these values know as instance methods Messages requesting an action or value are sent to objects Objects respond to messages that are in their protocols or interfaces

4 Objects Encapsulate data values within a single entity Their behavior is often general enough to allow reuse in a variety of situations Often form a basis from which other objects can be derived using a mechanism known as inheritance Are a type container that is stored on the system heap A client is program that uses an object

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6 Client Rights To declare variables of the class type To create instances of the class using constructors To send messages to instances of the class by invoking class instance methods To know the class public interface –instance method names –parameter number and types –return types To know the instance methods that alter (mutate) the instance

7 Class Rights To define the class public interface To hide all the implementation details from the client To protect internal data from client access To change implementation details at any time, provided the public interface remains intact To change the public interface with client concurrence

8 Revised Class Definition public class name { declarations of instance variables constructor definitions method definitions } Every class needs one or more constructor definitions

9 Revised Class Definition Instance variables –local data contained in class Method definitions –describe the class interface and how it responds to each client message Constructors definitions –describe how to initialize instance variables in a new object

10 Constructors Look like regular instance methods Never have a return type Always have the same name as the class name May have parameters Default constructors have no parameters Constructors can be overloaded (more than one definition in the same class)

11 Constructors public class Clock { int hour, minute; // constructor public Clock( ) { hour = 12; minute = 0; } // other methods follow … }

12 Using Constructors // c1 set to 12:00 Clock c1 = new Clock(); // c1 set to 8:30 c1.setHour(8); c1.setMinute(30); // c2 set to 12:00 c1 still 8:30 Clock c2 = new Clock();

13 Overloading Constructors Classes can have more than one constructor All constructors have the same name (the class name) Each constructor differs from the others in either the number or types of its arguments new is used when using a constructor to create a new object

14 Overloading Constructors We could add the following to Clock public Clock(int h, int m) { hour = h; minute = m; } A client program could contain Clock c1 = new Clock(8, 20); Which is the same as writing Clock c1 = new Clock( ); c1.setHour(8); c1.setMinute(20);

15 Overloaded Clock Constructors public class Clock { int hour, minute; public Clock () { hour = 12; minute = 0; } public Clock (int h, int m){ hour = h; minute = m; } … }

16 Using Constructors Clock c1 = new Clock( ); // c1 set to 12:00 Clock c2 = new Clock(8, 20); // c2 set to 8:20 Clock c3 = new Clock(); // c3 set to 8:20 c3.setHour(8); C3/setMinute(20);

17 Overloading Methods Methods can also be overloaded This allows different versions of the method in the same class Each method variant must differ from the others by the number or types of its parameters Overloading allows methods with the same name to have different return types

18 Methods Calling Other Methods Methods are allowed to call other methods in the same class without specifying an explicit receiver This allows overloaded methods to call one another without repeating redundant code Example: public void display (DrawingBox d, int r) { display(d, d.getDrawableWidth()/2, d.getDrawableHeight()/2, r); }

19 Dot Notation We can also use dot notation to view instance variables of the same class that are different from the receiver Example: public boolean priorTo (Clock c) { return (hour < c.hour || hour == c.hour && minute < c.minute); }

20 this – Avoiding Variable Name Collisions “this” can be used to distinguish between references to instance variables and local identifiers or arguments public void set (int hour, int minute) { int totalMinutes = (hour * 60 + minutes); this.minute = totalMinutes % 60; } this.minute refers to the instance variable minute not the method argument

21 this – Passing the Receiver as an Argument “this” can be used to send a message to the current receiver of the message without explicitly naming the receiver public boolean after (Clock c) { return c.priorTo(this); } this is used as if it were a variable referring to the receiver of the message

22 this – Chaining Constructors “this” can be used to simplify constructor code by allowing one constructor to call another We can rewrite the clock constructors as: public Clock ( ) { this(12,0); } public Clock (int hour, int minute) { set(hour, minute); }

23 Visibility Qualifiers public int x; // client creating instance o of this // class can access x by writing o.x private int y; // no can access y directly, access // provided though class methods To enforce complete information hiding all instance variables should be declared using private The default visibility of instance variables lies between private and public (explained later in the text)

24 Visibility Qualifiers and Methods By default class methods are also accessible to some classes but not others Visibility qualifiers should also be used in method declarations Examples: public void f( ) { // Any client using object o // can send it a message // by writing o.f( ) private void g( ) { // No client can send g to // the object except another // method from this class

25 Visibility and UML Diagrams In UML diagrams –private variables and methods are indicated using a leading minus sign as a prefix –public variables and methods are indicates using a leading plus sign as a prefix –a blank prefix means that the variables and methods are not annotated and will have their default visibility

26 Mutation An object can be changed by assigning a new value to one or more of its instance variables Example: d = new DrawingBox(); c = new Clock(); c.set(10, 20); c.display(d, 50, 50, 50); c.set(5, 40);

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28 Mutability Transforming an object from one state to another Only objects can be mutated, primitive values are not (e.g. x+4 does not change x) Objects are only mutable if its interface includes mutating methods

29 Nonmutation Creating a new object similar to original, but including the desired change Note the return type is Clock, not void Example: public Clock set_nonmut (int hour, int Minute) { return new Clock(hour, minute); }

30 What would happen? Consider the effects on the heap if the following sequence of statements was executed Clock c1 = new Clock(); Clock c2 = c1; c1.set(4, 30); c2.set(5, 40);

31 Heap After Assigning c1 to c2

32 Class Association Used to achieve certain desired behavior Association (or acquaintance) –classes and objects are linked in a manner that allows the object to remain visible to clients –classes can be linked when a client passes an object as a message argument to another object

33 Object Containing Reference to Another Object

34 UML Class Diagram for Clock-DrawingBox Association

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36 Class Containment Composition (or aggregation) –an object of one class is constructed from objects of other classes so that only the composite object is visible to clients –the component objects are internal to the containing object Aggregation is a weaker form of containment and will not be used in this text

37 UML Class Diagram for Clock-DrawingBox Composition

38 Representation Independence In OOP the representation of data is encapsulated, this means that the data representation may be changed without affecting the previous class behavior Clients should not be able to detect that a change has occurred Sometimes this is know as implementation independence

39 main Every Java program needs a class containing a static method called main Static methods (or class methods) are special methods that do not require receivers Static methods cannot refer to class instance variables, but can be invoked when no class instances exist Static methods will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 10


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