I was reading this answer and he mentioned a link, where author explains why shouldn't we use Cloneable. But, still have doubt what was stated there
If I have an array of Cloneable, you would think that I could run down that array and clone every element to make a deep copy of the array, but I can't. You can not cast something to Cloneable and call the clone method, because Cloneable doesn't have a public clone method and neither does Object. If you try to cast to Cloneable and call the clone method, the compiler will say you are trying to call the protected clone method on object.
But, here I did
Init s = Init.getInstance(); // getting instance
int count=0;
Cloneable[] v = new Cloneable[5]; // creating array
Init x = s;
Init y = new Init(s);
try {
while (count < 5) {
v[count++] = (Cloneable) s.clone(); // casting it.
}
s.setClassName("Example");
System.out.println(((Init) v[2]).getClassName()); // Displaying.
} catch (CloneNotSupportedException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
I was able to create Cloneable array and I did what author said will cause error Or Did I misunderstood author statement ? Anyone, please help me to understand the reason to choose Copy Constructor over Cloneable.