【转贴】java overriding vs hiding

导读:

注意一个原则:
动态绑定的时候,对静态方法的绑定只依据变量的声明类型。


Can I override a static method?
  Many people have heard that you can't override a static method. This is true - you can't. However it is possible to write code like this:class Foo {

public static void method() {

System.out.println("in Foo");

}

}

class Bar extends Foo {

public static void method() {

System.out.println("in Bar");

}

}This compiles and runs just fine. Isn't it an example of a static method overriding another static method? The answer is no - it's an example of a static method hidinganother static method. If you try to override a static method, the compiler doesn't actually stop you - it just doesn't do what you think it does.

   So what's the difference?

  Briefly, when you overridea method, you still get the benefits of run-time polymorphism, and when you hide, you don't. So what does that mean? Take a look at this code:class Foo {

public static void classMethod() {

System.out.println("classMethod() in Foo");

}

public void instanceMethod() {

System.out.println("instanceMethod() in Foo");

}

}

class Bar extends Foo {

public static void classMethod() {

System.out.println("classMethod() in Bar");

}

public void instanceMethod() {

System.out.println("instanceMethod() in Bar");

}

}



class Test {

public static void main(String[] args) {

Foo f = new Bar();

f.instanceMethod();

f.classMethod();

}

}If you run this, the output isinstanceMethod() in Bar

classMethod() in FooWhy do we get instanceMethod from Bar, but classMethod() from Foo? Aren't we using the same instance f to access both of these? Yes we are - but since one is overriding and the other is hiding, we see different behavior.

  Since instanceMethod() is (drum roll please...) an instance method, in which Bar overridesthe method from Foo, at run time the JVM uses the actualclass of the instance f to determine which method to run. Although f was declaredas a Foo, the actual instance we created was a new Bar(). So at runtime, the JVM finds that f is a Bar instance, and so it calls instanceMethod() in Bar rather than the one in Foo. That's how Java normally works for instance methods.

  With classMethod() though. since (ahem) it's a classmethod, the compiler and JVM don't expect to need an actual instance to invoke the method. And even if you provide one (which we did: the instance referred to by f) the JVM will never look at it. The compiler will only look at the declared typeof the reference, and use that declared type to determine, at compile time, which method to call. Since f is declared as type Foo, the compiler looks at f.classMethod() and decides it means Foo.classMethod. It doesn't matter that the instance reffered to by f is actually a Bar - for static methods, the compiler only uses the declared type of the reference. That's what we mean when we say a static method does not have run-time polymorphism.

  Because instance methods and class methods have this important difference in behavior, we use different terms - "overriding" for instance methods and "hiding" for class methods - to distinguish between the two cases. And when we say you can't override a static method, what that means is that even if you write code that lookslike it's overriding a static method (like the first Foo and Bar at the top of this page) - it won't behavelike an overridden method.

   So what about accessing a static method using an instance?

  It's possible in Java to write something like:f.classMethod();] where f is an instance of some class, and classMethod() is a class method (i.e. a static method) of that class. This is legal, but it's a bad idea because it creates confusion. The actual instancef is not really important here. Only the decleared typeof f matters. That is, what class is f declared to be? Since classMethod() is static, the class of f (as determined by the compiler at compile time) is all we need.

  Rather than writing:f.classMethod();It would be better coding style to write either:Foo.classMethod();orBar.classMethod(); That way, it is crystal clear which class method you would like to call. It is also clear that the method you are calling is indeed a class method.

  Barring that, you could always come up with this monstrosity:f.getClass().getMethod("classMethod", new Class[]).invoke(f, new Object[]);



本文转自

http://faq.javaranch.com/view?OverridingVsHiding
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