Monday, 16 September 2013
JAVA: Overloading and Overriding
Do you like this Article?
Overloading:
Overloading is a popular technique of object oriented programming. It allows you to define a method with same name but with different parameters list.
Java identifies method by its name and signature. So, if the combination of method name and signature is unique, the compiler doesn’t have any issue to identify it. When you use overloaded methods, the java compile will automatically identifies the right version of the method by number and/or types of passing parameters. But you can’t declare more than one method with same name and passing parameters. The compiler doesn’t consider return types when validating uniqueness of a method. That means you can’t have two methods with same name and passing parameters with different return type.
Java allows both method and constructor overloading. Let’s see this with an example.
Code:
package
com.interview.question.java;
public class OverloadingDemo
{
/**
*
* This class demonstrates overloading in
java
*
* @author
http://interviewquestionjava.blogspot.com
*
**/
private int a;
/* constructor overloading */
public
OverloadingDemo(){
}
public
OverloadingDemo(int a){
this.a = a;
}
/* method overloading */
public int add(int num){
a +=num;
return a;
}
public int add(String
str){
a+= Integer.valueOf(str);
return a;
}
public int add(int num1, int num2){
a += num1;
a += num2;
return a;
}
/* test overloading */
public static void main(String[]
args) {
OverloadingDemo objOverloadingDemo1
= new
OverloadingDemo();
OverloadingDemo objOverloadingDemo2
= new
OverloadingDemo(5);
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo1.add(5));
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo1.add("3"));
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo1.add(3,
5));
System.out.println("-----");
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo2.add(5));
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo2.add("3"));
System.out.println(objOverloadingDemo2.add(3,
5));
}
}
Output:
5
8
16
-----
10
13
21
Here, in this class OverloadingDemo we defined two constructors with different signatures, and three methods with same name but different number and/or types of passing parameters.
Overriding is the technique of inheriting a class and redefining the behaviors of the super class. That means, when you define a method in subclass with the same signature (name, plus the number and the type of its parameters) and return type as in the superclass, then you are overriding the method of the superclass in your subclass, and the technique is known as method overriding.
In method overriding, method name, method input parameters and return types in subclass should be same in superclass. It can only modify the behaviors. It can return a subtype of the original return type defined in superclass, and this technique is known as covariant return type [Java 1.5 or above support this]. For example, suppose the return type in superclass is java.util.Map, you can change it to java.util.HashMap in subclass, as HashMap is a subtype of Map.
You can also use @Override annotation [which is available in Java 1.5 or above] to tell the compiler that you are trying to override a method in the superclass. And, fof any reason, if the compile is unable to detect that method, it will generate an error.
In method overriding in java, you can level up the access level but you can’t level it down. That means, if a method is declared as protected in superclass, it can be set as public is subclass but not as private.
If a method is declared as final, it can’t be overridden.
Now let’s see with an example.
Overriding:
Overriding is the technique of inheriting a class and redefining the behaviors of the super class. That means, when you define a method in subclass with the same signature (name, plus the number and the type of its parameters) and return type as in the superclass, then you are overriding the method of the superclass in your subclass, and the technique is known as method overriding.
In method overriding, method name, method input parameters and return types in subclass should be same in superclass. It can only modify the behaviors. It can return a subtype of the original return type defined in superclass, and this technique is known as covariant return type [Java 1.5 or above support this]. For example, suppose the return type in superclass is java.util.Map, you can change it to java.util.HashMap in subclass, as HashMap is a subtype of Map.
You can also use @Override annotation [which is available in Java 1.5 or above] to tell the compiler that you are trying to override a method in the superclass. And, fof any reason, if the compile is unable to detect that method, it will generate an error.
In method overriding in java, you can level up the access level but you can’t level it down. That means, if a method is declared as protected in superclass, it can be set as public is subclass but not as private.
If a method is declared as final, it can’t be overridden.
Now let’s see with an example.
Code:
Super Class :
package
com.interview.question.java;
import
java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
public class SuperClass {
/**
*
* This is a sample class
*
* @author
http://interviewquestionjava.blogspot.com
*
**/
/* the return type of this method is
Map and in subclass it will be changed to HashMap */
public Map
methodForcovariant(){
Map map = new HashMap();
return map;
}
/* sample method which willbe
overridden in subclass */
public void sampleMethod(){
System.out.println("SuperClass.sampleMethod()");
}
/* the specifier of this method willbe
changed to public from protected in its subclass */
protected void
protectedMethod(){
System.out.println("SuperClass.protectedMethod()");
}
/* this method can't be overridden as
it's declare as final */
public final void finalMethod(){
System.out.println("SuperClass.finalMethod()");
}
}
Sub Class:
package
com.interview.question.java;
import
java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
public class OverridingDemo extends SuperClass{
/**
*
* This class demonstrates overriding by extending SuperClass
*
* @author http://interviewquestionjava.blogspot.com
*
**/
/* Overriding with covariant
return type :
* the return type of this method is modified
to its subtype which is allowed in method overriding */
@Override
public HashMap methodForcovariant(){
HashMap hmp = new HashMap();
return hmp;
}
/* Overriding:
* overriding the method
SuperClass.sampleMethod() */
@Override
public void sampleMethod(){
System.out.println("OverridingDemo.sampleMethod()");
}
/* Overriding access specifier:
* the specifier of this method is changed to
public from protected */
@Override
public void protectedMethod(){
System.out.println("OverridingDemo.protectedMethod()");
}
public static void main(String[]
args) {
SuperClass objSuperClass = new SuperClass();
SuperClass objOverridingDemo =
new
OverridingDemo();
objSuperClass.sampleMethod();
objOverridingDemo.sampleMethod();
}
}
Output:
SuperClass.sampleMethod()
OverridingDemo.sampleMethod()
Here, we have used 4 methods:
methodForcovariant() – it shows the change of return type to its subtype during method overriding.
sampleMethod() – it shows method overriding in normal way.
protectedMethod() – it shows method overriding by leveling up access specifiers.
finalMethod() – it shows we can’t override methods declared as final.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
Popular Posts
-
public - public means everyone can access it.That means it's in global scope. As, main method is called by JVM [ Java Virtual Machine...
-
throw is used to throw an exception in a program, explicitly . Whereas, throws is included in the method's declaration part, wi...
-
Singleton in one of the most popular yet controversial design pattern, in the world of object oriented programming. It's one of t...
-
Web Container / Servlet Container / Servlet Engine : In J2EE Architecture , a web container (also known as servlet container or ser...
-
Program compiles. But at runtime throws an error “NoSuchMethodError”.
-
Vector : It's synchronized. It's slower than ArrayList. It's generally used in ...
-
doGet(): protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp)throws ServletException, java.io.IOException – is a met...
-
In Java Programming Language , we must declare a variable name and type, before using it. The data type of a variable defines the th...
10 Responses to “ JAVA: Overloading and Overriding ”
16 September 2013 at 13:07
nice post
31 December 2013 at 13:14
thanks!
12 January 2016 at 07:33
Method Overriding in Java
Thanks for this post, keep sharing
22 November 2017 at 13:16
It’s a very informative and helpful article, thank you for sharing!
28 June 2018 at 16:34
Best MCA
colleges in noida
Best MSC IT
colleges in noida
Best M
TECH colleges in noida
29 October 2018 at 00:00
nice article, very informative.
for java interview programs visit: Java programming
8 November 2018 at 15:08
Very useful information that you have shared and it is very useful to me. Thanks for sharing the information with us.
kindle mobi conversions
14 August 2019 at 01:26
I learn a lots of things here. It is an amazing post , thanks for help me.
students can learn programming on python programming tutorial
java programming language
cpp programming language
10 May 2020 at 22:56
method overloading in java
Really nice your article thanks for sharing this article
21 May 2022 at 21:11
Really great article, Glad to read the article. It is very informative for us. Thanks for posting.
Post a Comment