If I do this in Java to call a method name from a class dynamically, it works.
MainApp app = new MainApp();
Method meth = app.getClass().getMethod("myMethod", MyParameterType.class);
//call method
meth.invoke(app, new MyParameterType("hello"));
But this worked because I know the constructor in the invoke method. But if I were to pass the Method object as a parameter to some other classes, and I don't know who is the constructor, I cannot invoke the method any more. Even if I know, I may not want to create a different object to just make a call to the method. For eg:
//This is in the class call MainApp.java.
//There is a method in MainApp.java that looks this way: myMethod(MyParameterType param);
MainApp app = new MainApp();
OtherClass myClass = new OtherClass();
Method meth = app.getClass().getMethod("myMethod", MyParameterType.class);
myClass.callMe(meth);
//Inside OtherClass.java
public void callMe(Method meth) {
//call method
meth.invoke(########, new MyParameterType("hello"));
}
In this case, what should I put for the ######## parameter? Within the context of OtherClass.java, the base constructor object wouldn't be known. And why would I need if since meth is already a Method type that I just call like a function?
Thanks