Polymorphism is the ability of an object to take on many forms. The
most common use of polymorphism in OOP occurs when a parent class
reference is used to refer to a child class object.
Any java object that can pass more than one IS-A test is considered
to be polymorphic. In Java, all java objects are polymorphic since any
object will pass the IS-A test for their own type and for the class
Object.
It is important to know that the only possible way to access an
object is through a reference variable. A reference variable can be of
only one type. Once declared the type of a reference variable cannot be
changed.
The reference variable can be reassigned to other objects provided
that it is not declared final. The type of the reference variable would
determine the methods that it can invoke on the object.
A reference variable can refer to any object of its declared type or
any subtype of its declared type. A reference variable can be declared
as a class or interface type.
Example:
Let us look at an example.
public interface Vegetarian{}
public class Animal{}
public class Deer extends Animal implements Vegetarian{}
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Now the Deer class is considered to be polymorphic since this has
multiple inheritance. Following are true for the above example:
- A Deer IS-A Animal
- A Deer IS-A Vegetarian
- A Deer IS-A Deer
- A Deer IS-A Object
When we apply the reference variable facts to a Deer object reference, the following declarations are legal:
Deer d = new Deer();
Animal a = d;
Vegetarian v = d;
Object o = d;
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All the reference variables d,a,v,o refer to the same Deer object in the heap.
Virtual Methods:
In this section, I will show you how the behavior of overridden
methods in Java allows you to take advantage of polymorphism when
designing your
classes.
We already have discussed method overriding, where a child class can
override a method in its parent. An overridden method is essentially
hidden in the parent class, and is not invoked unless the child class
uses the super keyword within the overriding method.
/* File name : Employee.java */
public class Employee
{
private String name;
private String address;
private int number;
public Employee(String name, String address, int number)
{
System.out.println("Constructing an Employee");
this.name = name;
this.address = address;
this.number = number;
}
public void mailCheck()
{
System.out.println("Mailing a check to " + this.name
+ " " + this.address);
}
public String toString()
{
return name + " " + address + " " + number;
}
public String getName()
{
return name;
}
public String getAddress()
{
return address;
}
public void setAddress(String newAddress)
{
address = newAddress;
}
public int getNumber()
{
return number;
}
}
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Now suppose we extend Employee class as follows:
/* File name : Salary.java */
public class Salary extends Employee
{
private double salary; //Annual salary
public Salary(String name, String address, int number, double
salary)
{
super(name, address, number);
setSalary(salary);
}
public void mailCheck()
{
System.out.println("Within mailCheck of Salary class ");
System.out.println("Mailing check to " + getName()
+ " with salary " + salary);
}
public double getSalary()
{
return salary;
}
public void setSalary(double newSalary)
{
if(newSalary >= 0.0)
{
salary = newSalary;
}
}
public double computePay()
{
System.out.println("Computing salary pay for " + getName());
return salary/52;
}
}
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Now you study the following program carefully and try to determine its output:
/* File name : VirtualDemo.java */
public class VirtualDemo
{
public static void main(String [] args)
{
Salary s = new Salary("Mohd Mohtashim", "Ambehta, UP",
3, 3600.00);
Employee e = new Salary("John Adams", "Boston, MA",
2, 2400.00);
System.out.println("Call mailCheck using
Salary reference --");
s.mailCheck();
System.out.println("\n Call mailCheck using
Employee reference--");
e.mailCheck();
}
}
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This would produce following result:
Constructing an Employee
Constructing an Employee
Call mailCheck using Salary reference --
Within mailCheck of Salary class
Mailing check to Mohd Mohtashim with salary 3600.0
Call mailCheck using Employee reference--
Within mailCheck of Salary class
Mailing check to John Adams with salary 2400.0
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Here we instantiate two Salary objects . one using a Salary reference s, and the other using an Employee reference e.
While invoking
s.mailCheck() the compiler sees mailCheck() in
the Salary class at compile time, and the JVM invokes mailCheck() in the
Salary class at run time.
Invoking mailCheck() on e is quite different because e is an Employee reference. When the compiler sees
e.mailCheck(), the compiler sees the mailCheck() method in the Employee class.
Here, at compile time, the compiler used mailCheck() in Employee to
validate this statement. At run time, however, the JVM invokes
mailCheck() in the Salary class.
This behavior is referred to as virtual method invocation, and the
methods are referred to as virtual methods. All methods in Java behave
in this
manner, whereby an overridden method is invoked at run time, no matter
what data type the reference is that was used in the source code at
compile time.
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