I am completely new to android and want to know the purpose of the @Override statement in Android.
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@Override is a Java annotation. It tells the compiler that the following method overrides a method of its superclass. For instance, say you implement a Person class.
The person class has an equals() method. The equals method is already defined in Person's superclass Object. Therefore the above implementation of equals() is a redefinition of equals() for Persons. That is to say, Person overrides equals(). It is legal to override methods without explicitly annotating it. So what is the @Override annotation good for? What if you accidentally tried to override equals() that way:
The above case has a bug. You meant to override equals() but you didn't. Why? because the real equals() gets an Object as a parameter and your equals() gets a Person as a parameter. The compiler is not going to tell you about the bug because the compiler doesn't know you wanted to override. As far as the compiler can tell, you actually meant to overload equals(). But if you tried to override equals using the @Override annotation:
Now the compiler knows that you have an error. You wanted to override but you didn't. So the reason to use the @Override annotation is to explicitly declare method overriding. | ||||
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Its a Java annotation (not Android-specific). You use it to mean for this method to override a method. The reason to use it is to catch errors when you create a method you intend to override a method, but through some error, it does not, e.g. typo in the method name, an error in the method signature, etc.. For example, sometimes developers to this:
The author intended this to override the superclass'
The compile will now give an error because the method does not override another method. This points out the problem early and hopefully saves some debugging time tracking down the problem. | ||||
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It's a Java annotation that tells the compiler that the method is intended to override a method from the superclass. It's not strictly necessary, but does help to catch errors at compile time. | |||
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Also See Example:
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It's an annotation in Java. It marks that the method is meant to override a method in a superclass. | |||
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See this previous StackOverflow Question: | |||||||
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That's a special, compiler reserved, Java annotation that denotes that you are overriding a superclass method. | |||
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