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Let say I have 3 classes that all extend the same class...

public class Foo {
     private String name;
     ...
}
public class FooExtend1 extends Foo {
     ...
}
public class FooExtend2 extends Foo {
     ...
}
public class FooExtend3 extends Foo {
     ...
}

then I create a util function that changes the property that implements from Foo...

public void changeName(??? param1) {
     param1.setName("");
}

and I want param1 to be all objects that extends from the Foo class.

Would I have to overload the method or is there another way?

3
  • 1
    "Would I have to overload the method [...]?" - No. Rename param1 to a and make it of type Foo and it will work as expected, given that Foo has a method public void setName(String).
    – Turing85
    Sep 24, 2020 at 14:05
  • @Turing85 you should post an answer here
    – IQbrod
    Sep 24, 2020 at 14:25
  • Do you have to do something different for each FooExtendN class?
    – fps
    Sep 24, 2020 at 14:31

2 Answers 2

3

We do not need to override the method since the inheritance-relationship between the types grants the capabilites of implicit widening conversion from sub- to supertype (see JLS, §5.1.5). Thus, we can rewrite the method to

public void changeName(Foo param1) {
     param1.setName("");
}

Ideone demo (I took the liberty and set the name in the utility method to "foo" so we can see that the method works in the demo output)

This works as expected, given that Foo has a method public String setName(String).


A remark: I would suggest renaming method changeName(...) to something more expressive, e.g. setEmptyName(...) or resetNameToDefault(...).

2
  • I even suggest to not create such method and access directly to Foo.setName()
    – IQbrod
    Sep 24, 2020 at 14:38
  • 1
    @IQbrod that depends on the domain. Maybe some kind of (controlled) reset-functionality is useful, while the setter should not be exposed publicly. In those circumstances, such a method can be of use. If it should be placed in the object itself or in some kind of utility object is debatable.
    – Turing85
    Sep 24, 2020 at 14:40
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Your method defined in parent is accessible for all its children:

public void changeName(String param1) {
     this.name = param1;
}

If you want to have method in some class outside:

public void changeName(Foo foo, String newName) {
     foo.setName(newName);
}

and you can pass any Foo descendant there.

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