I see people creating an instance of some class and assigning it to a reference variable of type interface that the class implements.
interface A {
void display();
}
public class InterfaceObject implements A {
public void display(){
System.out.println("show this..");
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
A aObj = new InterfaceObject();
aObj.display();//OUTOUT:show this..
InterfaceObject bObj = new InterfaceObject();
bObj.display();//OUTOUT:show this..
}
}
Here the object aObj is an interface object and the object bObj is a direct instance of the class implementing the interface. However the call display() through both the objects yeild same result.
QUESTION: What is the advantage of creating interface object(reference variable of interface type)? does it only add more confusion to the code? ofcourse, that will not be the case.
class OtherInterfaceObject implements A
which does something different whendisplay()
is called.