Why wasn't the .clone() method specified in the java.lang.Cloneable interface ?
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Basically, it's a broken interface. Ken Arnold and Bill Venners discussed it in Java Design Issues. Arnold:
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See this bug in the Java bugs database: http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=4098033 Essentially, this is a design flaw in earlier versions of Java that they are not intending to fix in the Cloneable interface as to do so would break compatibility with some existing code. |
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On the project I work on, we've created an interface called PublicCloneable, it contains the clone method and specifies that it is public. I find this one useful: the fact that there's a clone method, but you cannot access it doesn't help very much.
public interface PublicCloneable extends Cloneable {
public Object clone();
}
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In Java, there is this weird concept of marker interfaces. The from the dev-x website:
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Because the clone method is implemented in the Object class due to its "special" condition: the memory copy of objects of any kind. |
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