2
interface A {

    void hi();  
}

class AImpl implements A {

 public void hi() {

        System.out.println("hi");
    }

    public void to() {
        System.out.println("Test");
    }
}    

public class InterfaceTest {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        A a = new AImpl();
        a.hi();
        System.out.println(a.hashCode());
        //a.to();
    }
}

here interface A has no inheritance relationship with Object class but all the mehods of Object class can be access through the interface. why?

1 Answer 1

8

From the Java Language Specification section 9.2:

The members of an interface are:

  • Those members declared in the interface.
  • Those members inherited from direct superinterfaces.
  • If an interface has no direct superinterfaces, then the interface implicitly declares a public abstract member method m with signature s, return type r, and throws clause t corresponding to each public instance method m with signature s, return type r, and throws clause t declared in Object, unless a method with the same signature, same return type, and a compatible throws clause is explicitly declared by the interface. It is a compile-time error if the interface explicitly declares such a method m in the case where m is declared to be final in Object.

The third bullet is the important one - basically interfaces which don't extend any other interfaces automatically inherit hashCode etc.

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