I'm on solving some Java puzzles and stumbled on this one:
public class Outer {
class Inner1 extends Outer {}
class Inner2 extends Inner1 {}
}
While compiling this code with javac 1.6.0_45
I'm getting, as expected, this error:
Outer.java:8: cannot reference this before supertype constructor has been called
class Inner2 extends Inner1 {}
^
This is because of compiler generates default constructor for Inner2
class with similar code, which explains error above:
Inner2 () {
this.super();
}
And it's obvious now, because you really can't do this in Java 1.6.0_45, JLS 8.8.7.1 (as I can guess):
An explicit constructor invocation statement in a constructor body may not refer to any instance variables or instance methods declared in this class or any superclass, or use this or super in any expression; otherwise, a compile-time error occurs.
See (accepted answer in Odd situation for "cannot reference this before supertype constructor has been called")
But if I try to compile it with javac 1.7.0_79
- it is OK!
And here goes the question - What has been changed in Java 1.7, that this code is now correct?
Thanks in advance!
this.super()
is not equivalent tosuper()
. If you try to do this in non-inner non-nested class you will get a compile-time error, prior to [JLS1.6 8.8.7.1].If S is not an inner class, or if the declaration of S occurs in a static context, no immediately enclosing instance of i with respect to S exists. A compiletime error occurs if the superclass constructor invocation is a qualified superclass constructor invocation.
Similar to [JLS1.7 8.8.7.1].