I have an abstract class A
I have about 10 classes that extend A
Class A has one or two static methods and it makes sense that these are static, because they belong to the 10 classes, NOT instances of them. One static method e.g. is called getAllFromX, which gets all all instances of the class from X, whatever that may be, it may be a server, well it actually is, but it doesn't matter. So you see it makes sense these methods are static and are not bound to an instance.
At the same time class A has a NON-static abstract method, each subclass overrides this method (just returns a string). I cannot make it static because static methods cannot be overridden (...).
To summarize: abstract class A has a static method and a abstract non-static method, that is overriden by the subclasses. I cannot make the second method static because it must be overriden. On the otherhand I could make the first method non-static, but it would be very ugly and bad programming style, so I'll leave it that way.
The catch? The static method in class A must get the value the non-static method returns (for the subclass the static method is inherited from, of course).
Is the "easiest" way to use reflection to get this done? I mean...really?
Like e.g., I get the class the static method is in:
Class<?> cl=new Object(){}.getClass().getEnclosingClass(); (a hack I found here, thank god...)
I then use getConstructor to construct an object of this subclass.
And then I use this object to call the non-static method.
Really?? Can it not be done easier? I mean that is if I want to design my program conceptually correct...
Coming from C# I don't like that (and the type erasure thing). It is just ugly. Doable but ugly. And a big stumbling block, at least for beginners. EDIT: after reading it again, I'd add: /rant end. Sorry, but I actually care.
SubClassOfA.theStaticMethod(), you're in fact callingA.theStaticMethod(). The compiler lets you call it that way, but the generated byte code is:A.theStaticMethod(). If you want each subclass to have its own static method, then you must add it to each subclass, and you'll then hide the static method defined in A. – JB Nizet Dec 15 '12 at 16:29