NSMutableString
inherits from NSString
, but
Inheritance works as a "is a" relationship. So a Cat "is an" Animal. But an
NSMutableString
"is not" anNSString
. (becauseNSString
cannot mutate (cannot change))Usually, what a subclass an do, then the base class should be able to do. Such as a fish can swim, and some animal can swim. But an
NSMutableString
can change, andNSString
cannot change at all - noNSString
whatsoever can change.
So why does NSMutableString
inherits from NSString
? Also, NSMutableArray
inherits from NSArray
. Shouldn't NSString
inherits from NSMutableArray instead
, but with a "do not change flag" set to YES instead? What is the principle behind this?
Update: some answer will say: NSMutableString
can do all things that NSString
can, therefore NSMutableString
inherits from NSString
. But can this principle be used? A Stone can stay still. A Cat can stay still, and can move. A Cat can do all things that a Stone can, but we can't make Cat inherit from Stone, right?
If I have two game object classes: one is elastic object and one is non-elastic, I think it makes sense to implement the elastic one as the base class, and the non-elastic inherits from it with the flag that says the outer bound cannot change.