class That {
protected String nm() {
return "That";
}
}
class More extends That {
protected String nm() {
return "More";
}
protected void printNM() {
That sref = super;
System.out.println("this.nm() = " + this.nm());
System.out.println("sref.nm() = " + sref.nm());
System.out.println("super.nm() = " + super.nm());
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new More().printNM();
}
}
When trying to compile More.java I'm getting 4 errors:
More.java:7: error: '.' expected
That sref = super;
^
More.java:7: error: ';' expected
That sref = super;
^
More.java:9: error: illegal start of expression
System.out.println("this.nm() = " + this.nm());
^
More.java:9: error: ';' expected
System.out.println("this.nm() = " + this.nm());
^
4 errors
Is something wrong with the code? (It's from the book "The Java Programming Language" p.62)
EDIT: From the book: "And here is the output of printNM:
this.nm() = More
sref.nm() = More
super.nm() = That
So either they're using some deprecated super-feature(I think this is the first edition of the book) or it is a typo and maybe they meant: "That sref = new More()"