As Java 9 is going to allow us to define private
and private static
methods too in interfaces, what would be the remaining difference in interface
and class
?
Moreover, is Java moving towards multiple inheritance slowly?
5 Answers
Private interface methods in Java 9 behave exactly like other private methods: They must have a body (even in abstract classes) and can neither be called nor overridden by subclasses. As such they do not really interact with inheritance. Talking of which (and particularly multiple inheritance), there are (at least?) three kinds of it:
- Inheritance of types means that one type can be another type, e.g.
String
is anObject
. Java allowed multiple inheritance of types from day one (via interfaces). - Inheritance of behavior means that one type can inherit the behavior of another type. Before Java 8, only classes could implement methods, so there was only single inheritance of this kind. With Java 8 came default methods, which allowed interfaces to implement methods, thus giving Java multiple inheritance of behavior.
- Inheritance of state means that a type inherits another type's internal state (i.e. fields). As it stands (Java 9 and everything currently proposed for future Java versions), only classes can have state, so there is only single inheritance of this kind.
As you can see private interface methods do not add anything here.
Regarding your question of how interfaces and classes compare, there are two main differences: multiple inheritance and state. Interfaces support the former, classes can have the latter. Since state is kind-of important in typical OOP, classes will remain relevant. 😉
If there were a way for an interface to force an implementation to have a particular non-public field or straight-out define one itself, the game would change and interfaces could compete with classes.
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It's not pretty and I don't want to see it in production, but couldn't the state be encapsulated with an inner class to simulate multiple class inheritance? Similar to this: stackoverflow.com/questions/3427073/…– TerranOct 10, 2017 at 20:26
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Since the inner class as well as the field referencing it would be public, this doesn't really count as inheriting private state. ;) Public state is no problem, just pull the state-relating methods into the interface. Oct 11, 2017 at 6:13
Private methods are not inherited by subclasses, so this feature doesn't affect implementation classes. I believe the private methods in interfaces allow us to share code between default methods.
Java interfaces still cannot have non-static members. That's a big difference and not multiple inheritance IMO.
Java 9 interfaces still cannot contain fields and constructors. This makes a huge difference between classes and interfaces, so Java 9 is far from multiple inheritance.
Java Interface in version 9 have private methods but static private. The feature has been introduced to allow modular methods. One function should work with one responsibility instead of using lengthy default methods. It has nothing to do with multiple Inheritance. The more private static methods, the more you will be able to write the clean and reusable code. Anyways, static methods whether public or protected can not be overridden.
Although its an old question let me give my input on it as well :)
abstract class: Inside abstract class we can declare instance variables, which are required to the child class
Interface: Inside interface every variables is always public static and final we cannot declare instance variables
abstract class: Abstract class can talk about state of object
Interface: Interface can never talk about state of object
abstract class: Inside Abstract class we can declare constructors
Interface: Inside interface we cannot declare constructors as purpose of
constructors is to initialize instance variables. So what is the need of constructor there if we cannot have instance variables in interfaces.abstract class: Inside abstract class we can declare instance and static blocks
Interface: Interfaces cannot have instance and static blocks.
abstract class: Abstract class cannot refer lambda expression
Interfaces: Interfaces with single abstract method can refer lambda expression
abstract class: Inside abstract class we can override OBJECT CLASS methods
Interfaces: We cannot override OBJECT CLASS methods inside interfaces.
I will end on the note that:
Default method concepts/static method concepts in interface came just to save implementation classes but not to provide meaningful useful implementation. Default methods/static methods are kind of dummy implementation, "if you want you can use them or you can override them (in case of default methods) in implementation class" Thus saving us from implementing new methods in implementation classes whenever new methods in interfaces are added. Therefore interfaces can never be equal to abstract classes.
protected
support,package-private
support, basically everything but the addition ofprivate
andstatic
.. Interfaces can't extend classes, the reserved keywordsinterface
andclass
, the philosophy/purpose/reason for existance of the two.. Could probably keep going..private
methods in an interface, which obviously can’t have impact to other classes.