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Published byRandolf Townsend Modified over 9 years ago
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Inheritance & Classification Hierarchies Lecture-8
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Inheritance & Classification Hierarchies Inheritance is one of the most powerful features of O-O programming By organising classes into Classification Hierarchies we can add extra dimensions to encapsulation by grouping ADT's and enables classes to inherit from other classes thus extending the attributes and methods of the class which inherits The inheriting class may then also add extra functionality and attributes to produce a new object
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Terminology of inheritance The following terms are used to describe the different inheritance properties of an object Derived Class or Sub Class or Child Class A Class which inherits some of its attributes and methods from another class Base Class or superclass or Parent Class A Class from which another class inherits Ancestor A Classes ancestors are those from which its own superclass inherit Descendant A classes descendants are those which inherit from its superclasses
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Why do we need Inheritance ? What is the purpose of inheritance and why should we wish to inherit the attributes and methods of other Objects ? There are two main reasons for using inheritance in O-O which are Specialisation Extending the functionality of an existing class Generalisation Sharing commonality between two or more classes
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Classification Hierarchy The product of inheritance is a classification Hierarchy This is a relationship between classes where one class is said to be 'a kind of' other class As the class hierarchy is traversed from top to bottom we move from generalisation to specialisation of classes This is done by adding functionality to extend what exists at each level of the class hierarchy from the base class
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An Example Geometric Object 2D3D TriangleSquareSphereCube
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Class Hierarchy Diagram The base of this diagram is the Geometric Object class From this the 2D and 3D objects inherit the base features ( what could these be ?) After this there are specialised versions of the classes using the 'kind of' relationship where 2D objects such as triangle and Square inherit the base classes of a Geometric Object and then add special features specific to the type of object The same then applies for the other classes This tree runs from a generalisation of the base class to a specialisation of the actual object
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'a kind of' or 'a part of' Each level of a classification hierarchy contains more specific types of class each one of which must be 'a kind of' the class from which it inherits This distinction is important as the difference between 'a kind of' and 'a part of' is very different The distinction between different Objects and the same Objects with different states This mean analysis to see if difference of Objects are dependent upon the Object type or a state of that Object For Example Equilateral Triangle and Isosceles Triangle are inappropriate Object classifications as they are both really triangles (with just the angle between vertices being different) which we could store in a general triangle class
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What Do Objects Inherit ? A class does not contain any state values, only a 'blue print' for what value are to be contained Therefore a 'derived class' inherits all of the attributes from the 'base class' A derived class is by definition identical to the base class, but it can be built on to extend and modify the base class Objects of the derived class do not inherit anything from the objects of the base class As far as objects are concerned there is no hierarchy
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Example Line +startPosition: +endPosition: +Draw() Line Object start = (x,y) end = (x,y) draw(star,end) ColoredLine +color +set color() Line Object start = (x,y) end = (x,y) color=? draw(star,end) set color(col)
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