Consider this code (complete class, runs fine, all classes in one class for the sake of brevity).
My questions are after the code listing:
import java.util.LinkedList;
import java.util.List;
class Gadget {
public void switchon() {
System.out.println("Gadget is Switching on!");
}
}
interface switchonable {
void switchon();
}
class Smartphone extends Gadget implements switchonable {
@Override
public void switchon() {
System.out.println("Smartphone is switching on!");
}
}
class DemoPersonnel {
public void demo(Gadget g) {
System.out.println("Demoing a gadget");
}
public void demo(Smartphone s) {
System.out.println("Demoing a smartphone");
}
}
public class DT {
/**
* @param args
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<Gadget> l = new LinkedList<Gadget>();
l.add(new Gadget());
l.add(new Smartphone());
for (Gadget gadget : l) {
gadget.switchon();
}
DemoPersonnel p = new DemoPersonnel();
for (Gadget gadget : l) {
p.demo(gadget);
}
}
}
Questions:
From the compilers point of view, what is the origin of the switchon method in Smartphone? Is it inherited from the base class Gadget? Or is it an implementation of the switchon method mandated by the switchonable interface? Does the annotation make any difference here?
In the main method, first loop: Here, we see a case of runtime polymorphism - i.e., when the first for loop is running, and gadget.switchon() is called, it first prints "Gadget is switching on", and then it prints "Smartphone is switching on". But in the second loop, this runtime resolution does not happen, and the output for both calls to demo is "Demoing a gadget", whereas I was expecting it to print "Demoing a gadget" the first iteration, and "Demoing a smartphone" the second time.
What am I understanding wrong? Why does the runtime resolve the child class in the first for loop, but doesn't do so in the second for loop?
Lastly, a link to a lucid tutorial on runtime/compile-time polymorphism in Java will be appreciated. (Please do not post the Java tutorial trail links, I didn't find the material particularly impressive when discussing the finer nuances in respectable depth).