As ILikeTau's comment says, you can't access a class that you define in a method. You could define it outside the method, but another possibility is to define an interface
(or abstract class). Then the code would still be inside your method, and could access final
variables and parameters defined in the method (which you couldn't do if you moved the whole class outside). Something like:
class Outer {
int a = 100;
public interface AnInterface {
void mInner(); // automatically "public"
}
AnInterface mOuter() { // note that the return type is no longer Object
class Inner implements AnInterface {
@Override
public void mInner() { // must be public
int y = 200;
System.out.println("mInner..");
System.out.println("y : " + y);
}
}
Inner iob = new Inner();
return iob;
}
}
class Demo {
public static void main(String[] args) { // the preferred syntax
Outer t = new Outer();
Outer.AnInterface ob = t.mOuter();
ob.mInner();
}
}
Note: not tested
Note that the return type, and the type of ob
, have been changed from Object
. That's because in Java, if you declare something to be an Object
, you can only access the methods defined for Object
. The compiler has to know, at compile time (not at run time) that your object ob
has an mInner
method, and it can't tell that if the only thing it knows is that it's an Object
. By changing it to AnInterface
, the compiler now knows that it has an mInner()
method.
Inner
does not reference any fields ofOuter
nor any variables ofmOuter()
, it would be much better to make the class a static inner class.