I'm pretty shure the answer is somewhere, but either im lacking the correct key-words or simply should get some sleep, but here it is ;~) :
I need to extend BufferedImage and the only way to do this w/o MacGyvering the whole class would be to let the new class rest in java.awt.image, because it contains a package-visible-only field i need to access. Normaly, there would be a reason to dont to such a thing, but if you check the source, you'll see that this is not true in this special case.
So I tested it, it compiles and it seems to run.
But can i rely on it? Is it allowed? Is there anything that could prevent me from adding classes to java's predefined system packages? Or is this simply the correct way to do it and no one told me?
UPDATE
The answeres already provided stated the possibility of legal concerns (if doing something correctly means breaking some laws than my default solution frequently is beeing uninterested in those laws;-) and the possibility of changed behaviour in the super-class (very unlikely in that case). If that's all, i'd just do it that way…
UPDATE2
Great! Java is a protected package name… So i really have to MacGyver this…
UPDATE3
I was just wondering why i cant get the property hash-keys. The fn getPropertyNames is documented just so: Returns an array of names recognized by getProperty(String)… let's look into the sourcecode:
public String[] getPropertyNames() {
return null;
}
Best code i've ever read…
public
.BufferedImage
ispublic
. What are you doing? And why?