I have a number of classes that define a method, and I want to execute some code (say, some "prologue" and "epilogue") around that method:
public interface Thing {
public void stuff();
public void callStuff();
}
public abstract class Something implements Thing {
public abstract void stuff();
public void callStuff() {
... // common prologue
//try {
stuff();
//} finally {
... // common epilogue
//}
}
}
public class A extends Something {
public void stuff() { ... }
}
public class B extends Something {
public void stuff() { ... }
}
public class Wrapper extends Thing {
private Thing t;
Wrapper(Thing thing) { t = thing; }
public void stuff() { t.stuff(); }
public void callStuff() { t.callStuff(); }
}
// Use:
Something s = ...;
s.callStuff();
You see that the idea is that subclasses will redefine stuff()
while the clients will invoke callStuff()
. Nevertheless, in some rare cases one has to call stuff()
, see Wrapper
above.
Something like that we see in the Thread
class (since JDK 1.0), child classes redefine run()
but the clients invoke start()
.
How do I prevent clients from calling stuff()
directly?
EDIT
protected
does not work here because the "clients" really are children of Something
coded by another team. @Deprecated
would work, but stuff()
is not really deprecated, and everyone knows what "deprecated" is, so I cannot redefine the meaning of @Deprecated
.
Ideally, the compilation should fail unless an explicit directive is given to ignore the problem.
protected
?protected
will not help: it is child classes that must not invoke stuff() directly.