Java - Interfaces
Java - Interfaces
Java - Interfaces
Unless the class that implements the interface is abstract, all the methods of the interface need
to be defined in the class.
An interface is similar to a class in the following ways −
An interface can contain any number of methods.
An interface is written in a file with a .java extension, with the name of the interface
matching the name of the file.
The byte code of an interface appears in a .class file.
An interface cannot contain instance fields. The only fields that can appear in an
interface must be declared both static and final.
An interface is not extended by a class; it is implemented by a class.
Declaring Interfaces
The interface keyword is used to declare an interface. Here is a simple example to declare an
interface −
Example
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import java.lang.*;
Example
interface Animal {
Implementing Interfaces
When a class implements an interface, you can think of the class as signing a contract, agreeing
to perform the specific behaviors of the interface. If a class does not perform all the behaviors of
the interface, the class must declare itself as abstract.
A class uses the implements keyword to implement an interface. The implements keyword
appears in the class declaration following the extends portion of the declaration.
Example
System.out.println("Mammal eats");
System.out.println("Mammal travels");
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return 0;
m.eat();
m.travel();
Output
Mammal eats
Mammal travels
When overriding methods defined in interfaces, there are several rules to be followed −
Checked exceptions should not be declared on implementation methods other than the
ones declared by the interface method or subclasses of those declared by the interface
method.
The signature of the interface method and the same return type or subtype should be
maintained when overriding the methods.
An implementation class itself can be abstract and if so, interface methods need not be
implemented.
A class can extend only one class, but implement many interfaces.
An interface can extend another interface, in a similar way as a class can extend
another class.
Extending Interfaces
An interface can extend another interface in the same way that a class can extend another
class. The extends keyword is used to extend an interface, and the child interface inherits the
methods of the parent interface.
Example
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// Filename: Sports.java
// Filename: Football.java
// Filename: Hockey.java
The Hockey interface has four methods, but it inherits two from Sports; thus, a class that
implements Hockey needs to implement all six methods. Similarly, a class that implements
Football needs to define the three methods from Football and the two methods from Sports.
A Java class can only extend one parent class. Multiple inheritance is not allowed. Interfaces are
not classes, however, and an interface can extend more than one parent interface.
The extends keyword is used once, and the parent interfaces are declared in a comma-
separated list.
For example, if the Hockey interface extended both Sports and Event, it would be declared as −
Example
Tagging Interfaces
The most common use of extending interfaces occurs when the parent interface does not
contain any methods. For example, the MouseListener interface in the java.awt.event package
extended java.util.EventListener, which is defined as −
Example
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package java.util;
{}
An interface with no methods in it is referred to as a tagging interface. There are two basic
design purposes of tagging interfaces −
Creates a common parent − As with the EventListener interface, which is extended by dozens
of other interfaces in the Java API, you can use a tagging interface to create a common parent
among a group of interfaces. For example, when an interface extends EventListener, the JVM
knows that this particular interface is going to be used in an event delegation scenario.
Adds a data type to a class − This situation is where the term, tagging comes from. A class
that implements a tagging interface does not need to define any methods (since the interface
does not have any), but the class becomes an interface type through polymorphism.
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