If this line compiles:
EnglishTest x = new EnglishQuiz();
Then there must be an is-a
relationship between EnglishTest
and EnglishQuiz
; specifically, an EnglishQuiz
must be a subtype of an EnglishTest
, much like how an Integer
is a Number
.
Thus, x instanceof EnglishTest
is true, in the same way Integer instanceof Number
is true. An EnglishQuiz
is an EnglishTest
, after all.
Looking at the Java Language Specification Section 15.20.2:
At run time, the result of the instanceof operator is true if the value of the RelationalExpression is not null and the reference could be cast (§15.16) to the ReferenceType without raising a ClassCastException. Otherwise the result is false.
Because an EnglishQuiz
could always be cast to an EnglishTest
(such a cast is called an upcast and is always allowed, because an object can always be classified as its supertype), the instanceof
operator returns true
.
Another way of visualizing this might be this:
Object
|
Number
/ \
Integer Float
/ \
Pos. Neg.
/ \ / \
1 2 -4 -5
x instanceof y
will return true if y
is either the same type as x
or if you can reach y
by going up from x
.
EnglishQuiz
a kind ofEnglishTest
?EnglishQuiz extends EnglishTest
sorry for not adding that.