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Is it possible to write virtual methods in Java, as one would do in C++?

Or, is there a proper Java approach which you can implement that produces similar behavior? Could I please have some examples?

0

6 Answers 6

343

From wikipedia

In Java, all non-static methods are by default "virtual functions." Only methods marked with the keyword final, which cannot be overridden, along with private methods, which are not inherited, are non-virtual.

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  • 5
    Here is one of Jon Skeet's answer. Apr 20, 2015 at 8:49
  • I wonded if it's really true, because for what I've read, in Java, dynamic method dispatch happens only for the object the method is called on - as explained here so the example explaining virtual functions for C++ here is not valid for java.
    – Broccoli
    Dec 7, 2016 at 16:42
  • @QuaziIrfan That is difference between Java and C# though. Dec 24, 2019 at 6:09
  • A final method in Java still can be virtual. For example, we have a Base class with some method, and Derived class that extends Base and has its own implementation of some method marked by final reserved word. The some method is still virtual.
    – Andrey
    Feb 1 at 19:38
110

Can you write virtual functions in Java?

Yes. In fact, all instance methods in Java are virtual by default. Only certain methods are not virtual:

  • Class methods (because typically each instance holds information like a pointer to a vtable about its specific methods, but no instance is available here).
  • Private instance methods (because no other class can access the method, the calling instance has always the type of the defining class itself and is therefore unambiguously known at compile time).

Here are some examples:

"Normal" virtual functions

The following example is from an old version of the wikipedia page mentioned in another answer.

import java.util.*;

public class Animal 
{
   public void eat() 
   { 
      System.out.println("I eat like a generic Animal."); 
   }

   public static void main(String[] args) 
   {
      List<Animal> animals = new LinkedList<Animal>();

      animals.add(new Animal());
      animals.add(new Fish());
      animals.add(new Goldfish());
      animals.add(new OtherAnimal());

      for (Animal currentAnimal : animals) 
      {
         currentAnimal.eat();
      }
   }
}

class Fish extends Animal 
{
   @Override
   public void eat() 
   { 
      System.out.println("I eat like a fish!"); 
   }
}

class Goldfish extends Fish 
{
   @Override
   public void eat() 
   { 
      System.out.println("I eat like a goldfish!"); 
   }
}

class OtherAnimal extends Animal {}

Output:

I eat like a generic Animal.
I eat like a fish!
I eat like a goldfish!
I eat like a generic Animal.

Example with virtual functions with interfaces

Java interface methods are all virtual. They must be virtual because they rely on the implementing classes to provide the method implementations. The code to execute will only be selected at run time.

For example:

interface Bicycle {         //the function applyBrakes() is virtual because
    void applyBrakes();     //functions in interfaces are designed to be 
}                           //overridden.

class ACMEBicycle implements Bicycle {
    public void applyBrakes(){               //Here we implement applyBrakes()
       System.out.println("Brakes applied"); //function
    }
}

Example with virtual functions with abstract classes.

Similar to interfaces Abstract classes must contain virtual methods because they rely on the extending classes' implementation. For Example:

abstract class Dog {                   
    final void bark() {               //bark() is not virtual because it is 
        System.out.println("woof");   //final and if you tried to override it
    }                                 //you would get a compile time error.

    abstract void jump();             //jump() is a "pure" virtual function 
}                                     
class MyDog extends Dog{
    void jump(){
        System.out.println("boing");    //here jump() is being overridden
    }                                  
}
public class Runner {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Dog dog = new MyDog();       // Create a MyDog and assign to plain Dog variable
        dog.jump();                  // calling the virtual function.
                                     // MyDog.jump() will be executed 
                                     // although the variable is just a plain Dog.
    }
}
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    This has got to be the most complete answer. It provides 2 ways to implement a virtual function since java does not have the keyword. Thank you. Aug 31, 2014 at 1:12
  • Much better answer than the Wikipedia citation. Coming from c++ and being lazy with my Java studies, abstract was what I was looking for.
    – David
    Jan 6, 2015 at 3:25
  • @David How is this answer better? The wikipedia citation is complete, concise and correct. This answer, by contrast, fails to mention the elephant in the room: By default all functions in Java (with the exceptions listed in the wikipedia article) are virtual. Neither abstract classes nor interfaces are necessary for virtual functions, so that's only adding misleading noise. And then this "requires great communication skills and a deep mastery of underlying principles"... jeez. That is a self-falsifying statement right there: Nobody who had that would waste valuable disk space with it. Nov 5, 2015 at 11:08
  • The wikipedia post is inferior and less specific to this answer because it is about the concept of virtual functions in any language, rather than just java. The example given in the wikipedia page is written in C, and it's an incomplete one at best, and it's more misleading. The detail about all functions being virtual, and that you don't need abstract classes or interfaces to have virtual functions being noise. I never said they are required, you misread that. I'm not understanding your final point, do you want me to delete this question because you don't like it? Nov 5, 2015 at 12:21
  • 1
    Few years late here but fantastic answer
    – Tom O.
    Jan 18, 2019 at 21:54
59

All functions in Java are virtual by default.

You have to go out of your way to write non-virtual functions by adding the "final" keyword.

This is the opposite of the C++/C# default. Class functions are non-virtual by default; you make them so by adding the "virtual" modifier.

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  • 5
    private functions as stated in Klaus's answer are also non-virtual.
    – Don Larynx
    Mar 24, 2015 at 1:24
9

All non-private instance methods are virtual by default in Java.

In C++, private methods can be virtual. This can be exploited for the non-virtual-interface (NVI) idiom. In Java, you'd need to make the NVI overridable methods protected.

From the Java Language Specification, v3:

8.4.8.1 Overriding (by Instance Methods) An instance method m1 declared in a class C overrides another instance method, m2, declared in class A iff all of the following are true:

  1. C is a subclass of A.
  2. The signature of m1 is a subsignature (§8.4.2) of the signature of m2.
  3. Either * m2 is public, protected or declared with default access in the same package as C, or * m1 overrides a method m3, m3 distinct from m1, m3 distinct from m2, such that m3 overrides m2.
4

Yes, you can write virtual "functions" in Java.

1

In Java, all public (non-private) variables & functions are Virtual by default. Moreover variables & functions using keyword final are not virtual.

1
  • what do you mean by "virtual variables"?
    – neoexpert
    Nov 18, 2019 at 8:03

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