Let's start out with some definitions first:
Interface n. The set of all signatures defined by an object's operations is called the interface to the object
Type n. A particular interface
A simple example of an interface as defined above would be all the PDO object methods such as query()
, commit()
, close()
etc., as a whole, not separately. These methods, i.e. its interface define the complete set of messages, requests that can be sent to the object.
A type as defined above is a particular interface. I will use the made-up shape interface to demonstrate: draw()
, getArea()
, getPerimeter()
etc..
If an object is of the Database type we mean that it accepts messages/requests of the database interface, query()
, commit()
etc.. Objects can be of many types. You can have a database object be of the shape type as long as it implements its interface, in which case this would be sub-typing.
Many objects can be of many different interfaces/types and implement that interface differently. This allows us to substitute objects, letting us choose which one to use. Also known as polymorphism.
The client will only be aware of the interface and not the implementation.
So in essence programming to an interface would involve making some type of abstract class such as Shape
with the interface only specified i.e. draw()
, getCoordinates()
, getArea()
etc.. And then have different concrete classes implement those interfaces such as a Circle class, Square class, Triangle class. Hence program to an interface not an implementation.