Can have an abstract class implementing all of its methods-- with no abstract methods in it.
Eg.:
public abstract class someClass {
int a;
public someClass (int a) { this.a = a; }
public void m1 () { /* do something */ }
private void m2 () { /* do something else */ }
}
What's the advantage, if any, of having such an abstract class compared to having the same class as a concrete one instead?
One i can think of is that, when i declare it as abstract, it won't be instantiated. however, i can have the same effect by making it concrete and its constructor(s) private.
TIA.
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EDIT: One other use I can think of:
it may be extending another abstract class or implementing an interface without implementing that class's abstract methods-- although it is implementing all methods of its own. for whatever it' worth.
protected
(watch out for the default one) has a very similar effect and is in fact my preferred way of doing this. Maybe it's a typo in the OP.