I have a problem. It stems from calling a subclass method from a superclass, but with a twist. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
For example let's say I have a subclass MultipleChoice
that extends an abstract superclass Question
. The class MultipleChoice
has a method addChoice(String choice)
, while Question
does everything any question should do, like display the question prompt, and check for the correct answer.
I'd like to create an instance of MultipleChoice
that references Question
, and then call the addChoice(String choice)
method. The reason for this is because I'd like to create a list of questions, and then put different types of questions in there (e.g. multiple choice, true and false, etc.).
Something like this:
ArrayList<Question> list = new ArrayList();
list.add(new MultipleChoice()); //this is valid
list.get(0).addChoice("abc");
list.get(0).addChoice("xyz"); //etc
However, this of course is a compile error, since not every question is a multiple choice type of question.
I know of two solutions for this.
- Typecast:
((MultipleChoice)list.get(0)).addChoice("abc");
- Add the method
addChoice(String choice)
into the superclassQuestion
, so it can be overridden byMultiplceChoice
.
Since I'm going to be accessing list
many times, option 1 is well... ugly, while option 2 just seems to really poor practice, especially since Question
is abstract.
How can I approach this elegantly?