6. Methods: Communicating with Objects

6.8. Object-Oriented Design:Inheritance and Polymorphism

This use of Object’s toString() method provides our first look at Java’s inheritance mechanism and how it promotes the generality and extensibility of the object-oriented approach. As a subclass of Object, our OneRowNim class automatically inherits toString() and any other public or protected methods defined in Object. We can simply use these methods as is, insofar as they are useful to us. As we saw in this case, the default version of toString() wasn’t very useful. In that case,

 

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we can override the method by defining a method in our class with the exact same method signature. The new version of toString() can be customized to do exactly what is most appropriate for the subclass.

One of the great benefits of the object-oriented approach is the ability to define a task, such as toString(), at a very high level in the class hierarchy and let the inheritance mechanism spread that task through- out the rest of the hierarchy. Because toString() is defined in Object, you can invoke this method for any Java object. Moreover, if you over- ride toString() in the classes you define, you will be contributing to its usefulness. Two important lessons from this example are

 

 

Obviously there is much more that needs to be explained about Java’s inheritance mechanism. Therefore, we will be revisiting this topic on numerous occasions in subsequent chapters.

Another important concept of object-oriented design is polymorphism. The toString() method is an example of a polymorphic method. The term polymorphism is from the Greek terms poly, which means “many,” and morph, which means “form.” The toString() method is polymor- phic because it has different behavior when invoked on different objects.

For example, suppose we design a class, Student, as a subclass of Object and define its toString() method to return the student ID number. Given this design, then obj.toString() will return a student ID if obj is an instance of Student, but if it is an instance of OneRowNim, it will return a the description of its state that we defined above. The following code segment illustrates this point:

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In this case, the variable obj is used to refer to a Student and then to a OneRowNim instance. This is okay because both classes are subclasses of Object. When toString() is invoked on obj, Java will figure out what subclass of Object the instance belongs to and invoke the appropriate toString() method.