Java Interfaces
Java Interfaces
Java - Interfaces
Java Interfaces
Java interface is a collection of abstract methods. The interface is used to achieve
abstraction in which you can define methods without their implementations (without
having the body of the methods). An interface is a reference type and is similar to the
class.
Along with abstract methods, an interface may also contain constants, default methods,
static methods, and nested types. Method bodies exist only for default methods and
static methods.
Writing an interface is similar to writing a class. However, a class describes the attributes
and behaviors of an object. An interface contains behaviors that a class implements.
Unless the class that implements the interface is abstract, all the methods of the
interface need to be defined in the class.
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Similarities
An interface is written in a file with a .java extension, with the name of the
interface matching the name of the file.
Differences
An interface cannot contain instance fields. The only fields that can appear in an
interface must be declared both static and final.
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An interface is implicitly abstract. You do not need to use the abstract keyword
while declaring an interface.
Example
Open Compiler
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Output
Mammal eats
Mammal travels
When overriding methods defined in interfaces, there are several rules to be followed −
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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.
// Filename: Sports.java
public interface Sports {
public void setHomeTeam(String name);
public void setVisitingTeam(String name);
}
// Filename: Football.java
public interface Football extends Sports {
public void homeTeamScored(int points);
public void visitingTeamScored(int points);
public void endOfQuarter(int quarter);
}
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// Filename: Hockey.java
public interface Hockey extends Sports {
public void homeGoalScored();
public void visitingGoalScored();
public void endOfPeriod(int period);
public void overtimePeriod(int ot);
}
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.
Example
Open Compiler
interface Sports {
public void setHomeTeam(String name);
public void setVisitingTeam(String name);
}
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Output
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 −
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interface Sports {
public void setHomeTeam(String name);
public void setVisitingTeam(String name);
}
interface Event {
public void organize();
}
public class HockeyDemo implements Hockey, Event {
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Output
Example
package java.util;
public interface EventListener
{}
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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