I was asked in an interview how you can achieve dynamic polymorphism without extending a class. How can this be done?
3 Answers
Decorator design pattern that exploits encapsulation is what you're looking for.
Polymorphism through inheritance:
class Cat {
void meow() {
// meow...
}
}
class Lion extends Cat {
}
Polymorphism through encapsulation (Decorator pattern):
interface Cat {
void meow();
}
class Lion implements Cat {
private Cat cat;
void meow() {
this.cat.meow();
}
}
ps. More about decorators: http://www.yegor256.com/2015/02/26/composable-decorators.html
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In your comment to the OP, you state, polymorphism without inheritance is not possible in Java, yet here you give an example of polymorphism through encapsulation. Does this example contradict the previous statement?– jaco0646Jul 31, 2016 at 15:05
The simple solution is to write a class that implements an interface rather than extending a base class.
Another solution is to create a dynamic proxy ... which is essentially a clever way of implementing an interface without explicitly writing the class. See the Proxy
javadoc for details.
And yes, these are (or can be) examples of the decorator pattern, though the key thing here is the implementation techniques rather than the design pattern.
According to my experience, in most job interviews the questions do not look for way too elaborate answers, and most of the times are just tricky questions, so if they asked specifically for polymorphism without extending a class, then I would say:
Yes, you can have dynamic polymorphism by implementing an interface rather than extending a class
then if they would ask for more options then it would be ok to bring up proxies, patterns or something else.
Hope it helps!
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2A good interviewer will be trying to find out 1) how much you know, and 2) whether you know how to pick an appropriate solution, and 3) whether you can communicate well. So yes, the right way to answer this would be to offer the simple solution, and hint that there are other solutions, and related design patterns. A "long and fulsome" answer where a short answer is required/expected shows poor communication skills (IMO). Sep 11, 2012 at 0:00
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But I should add that I read this Question as asking for technical information, not for advice on what to say in an interview context. Sep 11, 2012 at 5:54
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2'A "long and fulsome" answer where a short answer is required/expected shows poor communication skills (IMO).'; or a lack of knowledge, yes? And that difference is important (IMO). It may be the case that it costs more money to the company to increase someone's communication skills than to teach them some java design pattern. Sep 11, 2012 at 18:51
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@claytontstanley - I think there two cases: 1) a long and coherent, but way too detailed answer, and 2) a long and incoherent answer. The first suggests poor communication skills, the second also suggests lack of knowledge and willingness to bluff the interviewer. None of these are good signs. Sep 12, 2012 at 6:50
extends
andimplements
are both forms of inheritance in the broad sense.