The JavaDoc says:
Class Object
is the root of the class hierarchy. ...
If a class does not extend any other class by decalring it using the keyword extends
it extends though implicit from Object
.
The documentation says:
In the absence of any other explicit superclass, every class is
implicitly a subclass of Object.
See the Example 8.1.4-1 "Direct Superclasses and Subclasses" in JLS, chapter 8.1.4
It shows that a class Point { int x, y; }
"is a direct subclass of Object"
Moreover the documentation says:
Classes can be derived from classes that are derived from classes that
are derived from classes, and so on, and ultimately derived from the
topmost class, Object
. Such a class is said to be descended from all
the classes in the inheritance chain stretching back to Object
.
The JLS states it short and formal:
The subclass relationship is the transitive closure of the direct
subclass relationship.
Thus class Object
is the superclass of all classes.
But the documentation also says:
Excepting Object
, which has no superclass, every class has one and only one direct superclass (single
inheritance).
Going on with the example a class ColoredPoint extends Point { int color; }
"is a direct subclass of class Point
.". By the transitive relationship it's a (non-direct) subclass of class Object
.
Summarizing:
Object
is either the direct superclass or by transitive relationship the last superclass of any other class.
Answering the questions:
- Java does not support multiple inheritance: It provides single inheritence in a transitive way. Every class extends directly only one supercalss.
- How is the relationship: The class
Parent
corresponds to the class Point
and the class Child
to the class ColoredPoint
of the JLS example. Only Option 2 shows this relation.
Object
is the superclass of every class in Java.multilevel inheritance
andmultiple inheritance
are not the same things. Java supports themultilevel inheritance
, but C++ does both.