Abstract class in Java - java

What is an "abstract class" in Java?

An abstract class is a class which cannot be instantiated. An abstract class is used by creating an inheriting subclass that can be instantiated. An abstract class does a few things for the inheriting subclass:
Define methods which can be used by the inheriting subclass.
Define abstract methods which the inheriting subclass must implement.
Provide a common interface which allows the subclass to be interchanged with all other subclasses.
Here's an example:
abstract public class AbstractClass
{
abstract public void abstractMethod();
public void implementedMethod() { System.out.print("implementedMethod()"); }
final public void finalMethod() { System.out.print("finalMethod()"); }
}
Notice that "abstractMethod()" doesn't have any method body. Because of this, you can't do the following:
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
// ERROR!
}
There's no method that implements abstractMethod()! So there's no way for the JVM to know what it's supposed to do when it gets something like new ImplementingClass().abstractMethod().
Here's a correct ImplementingClass.
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
public void abstractMethod() { System.out.print("abstractMethod()"); }
}
Notice that you don't have to define implementedMethod() or finalMethod(). They were already defined by AbstractClass.
Here's another correct ImplementingClass.
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
public void abstractMethod() { System.out.print("abstractMethod()"); }
public void implementedMethod() { System.out.print("Overridden!"); }
}
In this case, you have overridden implementedMethod().
However, because of the final keyword, the following is not possible.
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
public void abstractMethod() { System.out.print("abstractMethod()"); }
public void implementedMethod() { System.out.print("Overridden!"); }
public void finalMethod() { System.out.print("ERROR!"); }
}
You can't do this because the implementation of finalMethod() in AbstractClass is marked as the final implementation of finalMethod(): no other implementations will be allowed, ever.
Now you can also implement an abstract class twice:
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
public void abstractMethod() { System.out.print("abstractMethod()"); }
public void implementedMethod() { System.out.print("Overridden!"); }
}
// In a separate file.
public class SecondImplementingClass extends AbstractClass
{
public void abstractMethod() { System.out.print("second abstractMethod()"); }
}
Now somewhere you could write another method.
public tryItOut()
{
ImplementingClass a = new ImplementingClass();
AbstractClass b = new ImplementingClass();
a.abstractMethod(); // prints "abstractMethod()"
a.implementedMethod(); // prints "Overridden!" <-- same
a.finalMethod(); // prints "finalMethod()"
b.abstractMethod(); // prints "abstractMethod()"
b.implementedMethod(); // prints "Overridden!" <-- same
b.finalMethod(); // prints "finalMethod()"
SecondImplementingClass c = new SecondImplementingClass();
AbstractClass d = new SecondImplementingClass();
c.abstractMethod(); // prints "second abstractMethod()"
c.implementedMethod(); // prints "implementedMethod()"
c.finalMethod(); // prints "finalMethod()"
d.abstractMethod(); // prints "second abstractMethod()"
d.implementedMethod(); // prints "implementedMethod()"
d.finalMethod(); // prints "finalMethod()"
}
Notice that even though we declared b an AbstractClass type, it displays "Overriden!". This is because the object we instantiated was actually an ImplementingClass, whose implementedMethod() is of course overridden. (You may have seen this referred to as polymorphism.)
If we wish to access a member specific to a particular subclass, we must cast down to that subclass first:
// Say ImplementingClass also contains uniqueMethod()
// To access it, we use a cast to tell the runtime which type the object is
AbstractClass b = new ImplementingClass();
((ImplementingClass)b).uniqueMethod();
Lastly, you cannot do the following:
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass, SomeOtherAbstractClass
{
... // implementation
}
Only one class can be extended at a time. If you need to extend multiple classes, they have to be interfaces. You can do this:
public class ImplementingClass extends AbstractClass implements InterfaceA, InterfaceB
{
... // implementation
}
Here's an example interface:
interface InterfaceA
{
void interfaceMethod();
}
This is basically the same as:
abstract public class InterfaceA
{
abstract public void interfaceMethod();
}
The only difference is that the second way doesn't let the compiler know that it's actually an interface. This can be useful if you want people to only implement your interface and no others. However, as a general beginner rule of thumb, if your abstract class only has abstract methods, you should probably make it an interface.
The following is illegal:
interface InterfaceB
{
void interfaceMethod() { System.out.print("ERROR!"); }
}
You cannot implement methods in an interface. This means that if you implement two different interfaces, the different methods in those interfaces can't collide. Since all the methods in an interface are abstract, you have to implement the method, and since your method is the only implementation in the inheritance tree, the compiler knows that it has to use your method.

A Java class becomes abstract under the following conditions:
1. At least one of the methods is marked as abstract:
public abstract void myMethod()
In that case the compiler forces you to mark the whole class as abstract.
2. The class is marked as abstract:
abstract class MyClass
As already said: If you have an abstract method the compiler forces you to mark the whole class as abstract. But even if you don't have any abstract method you can still mark the class as abstract.
Common use:
A common use of abstract classes is to provide an outline of a class similar like an interface does. But unlike an interface it can already provide functionality, i.e. some parts of the class are implemented and some parts are just outlined with a method declaration. ("abstract")
An abstract class cannot be instantiated, but you can create a concrete class based on an abstract class, which then can be instantiated. To do so you have to inherit from the abstract class and override the abstract methods, i.e. implement them.

A class that is declared using the abstract keyword is known as abstract class.
Abstraction is a process of hiding the data implementation details, and showing only functionality to the user. Abstraction lets you focus on what the object does instead of how it does it.
Main things of abstract class
An abstract class may or may not contain abstract methods.There can be non abstract methods.
An abstract method is a method that is declared without an
implementation (without braces, and followed by a semicolon), like this:
ex : abstract void moveTo(double deltaX, double deltaY);
If a class has at least one abstract method then that class must be abstract
Abstract classes may not be instantiated (You are not allowed to create object of Abstract class)
To use an abstract class, you have to inherit it from another class. Provide implementations to all the abstract methods in it.
If you inherit an abstract class, you have to provide implementations to all the abstract methods in it.
Declare abstract class
Specifying abstract keyword before the class during declaration makes it abstract. Have a look at the code below:
abstract class AbstractDemo{ }
Declare abstract method
Specifying abstract keyword before the method during declaration makes it abstract. Have a look at the code below,
abstract void moveTo();//no body
Why we need to abstract classes
In an object-oriented drawing application, you can draw circles, rectangles, lines, Bezier curves, and many other graphic objects. These objects all have certain states (for ex -: position, orientation, line color, fill color) and behaviors (for ex -: moveTo, rotate, resize, draw) in common. Some of these states and behaviors are the same for all graphic objects (for ex : fill color, position, and moveTo). Others require different implementation(for ex: resize or draw). All graphic objects must be able to draw or resize themselves, they just differ in how they do it.
This is a perfect situation for an abstract superclass. You can take advantage of the similarities, and declare all the graphic objects to inherit from the same abstract parent object (for ex : GraphicObject) as shown in the following figure.
First, you declare an abstract class, GraphicObject, to provide member variables and methods that are wholly shared by all subclasses, such as the current position and the moveTo method. GraphicObject also declared abstract methods, such as draw or resize, that need to be a implemented by all subclasses but must be implemented in different ways. The GraphicObject class can look something like this:
abstract class GraphicObject {
void moveTo(int x, int y) {
// Inside this method we have to change the position of the graphic
// object according to x,y
// This is the same in every GraphicObject. Then we can implement here.
}
abstract void draw(); // But every GraphicObject drawing case is
// unique, not common. Then we have to create that
// case inside each class. Then create these
// methods as abstract
abstract void resize();
}
Usage of abstract method in sub classes
Each non abstract subclasses of GraphicObject, such as Circle and Rectangle, must provide implementations for the draw and resize methods.
class Circle extends GraphicObject {
void draw() {
//Add to some implementation here
}
void resize() {
//Add to some implementation here
}
}
class Rectangle extends GraphicObject {
void draw() {
//Add to some implementation here
}
void resize() {
//Add to some implementation here
}
}
Inside the main method you can call all methods like this:
public static void main(String args[]){
GraphicObject c = new Circle();
c.draw();
c.resize();
c.moveTo(4,5);
}
Ways to achieve abstraction in Java
There are two ways to achieve abstraction in java
Abstract class (0 to 100%)
Interface (100%)
Abstract class with constructors, data members, methods, etc
abstract class GraphicObject {
GraphicObject (){
System.out.println("GraphicObject is created");
}
void moveTo(int y, int x) {
System.out.println("Change position according to "+ x+ " and " + y);
}
abstract void draw();
}
class Circle extends GraphicObject {
void draw() {
System.out.println("Draw the Circle");
}
}
class TestAbstract {
public static void main(String args[]){
GraphicObject grObj = new Circle ();
grObj.draw();
grObj.moveTo(4,6);
}
}
Output:
GraphicObject is created
Draw the Circle
Change position according to 6 and 4
Remember two rules:
If the class has few abstract methods and few concrete methods,
declare it as an abstract class.
If the class has only abstract methods, declare it as an interface.
References:
TutorialsPoint - Java Abstraction
BeginnersBook - Java Abstract Class Method
Java Docs - Abstract Methods and Classes
JavaPoint - Abstract Class in Java

It's a class that cannot be instantiated, and forces implementing classes to, possibly, implement abstract methods that it outlines.

Simply speaking, you can think of an abstract class as like an Interface with a bit more capabilities.
You cannot instantiate an Interface, which also holds for an abstract class.
On your interface you can just define the method headers and ALL of the implementers are forced to implement all of them. On an abstract class you can also define your method headers but here - to the difference of the interface - you can also define the body (usually a default implementation) of the method. Moreover when other classes extend (note, not implement and therefore you can also have just one abstract class per child class) your abstract class, they are not forced to implement all of your methods of your abstract class, unless you specified an abstract method (in such case it works like for interfaces, you cannot define the method body).
public abstract class MyAbstractClass{
public abstract void DoSomething();
}
Otherwise for normal methods of an abstract class, the "inheriters" can either just use the default behavior or override it, as usual.
Example:
public abstract class MyAbstractClass{
public int CalculateCost(int amount){
//do some default calculations
//this can be overriden by subclasses if needed
}
//this MUST be implemented by subclasses
public abstract void DoSomething();
}

From oracle documentation
Abstract Methods and Classes:
An abstract class is a class that is declared abstract—it may or may not include abstract methods
Abstract classes cannot be instantiated, but they can be subclassed
An abstract method is a method that is declared without an implementation (without braces, and followed by a semicolon), like this:
abstract void moveTo(double deltaX, double deltaY);
If a class includes abstract methods, then the class itself must be declared abstract, as in:
public abstract class GraphicObject {
// declare fields
// declare nonabstract methods
abstract void draw();
}
When an abstract class is subclassed, the subclass usually provides implementations for all of the abstract methods in its parent class. However, if it does not, then the subclass must also be declared abstract.
Since abstract classes and interfaces are related, have a look at below SE questions:
What is the difference between an interface and abstract class?
How should I have explained the difference between an Interface and an Abstract class?

Get your answers here:
Abstract class vs Interface in Java
Can an abstract class have a final method?
BTW - those are question you asked recently. Think about a new question to build up reputation...
Edit:
Just realized, that the posters of this and the referenced questions have the same or at least similiar name but the user-id is always different. So either, there's a technical problem, that keyur has problems logging in again and finding the answers to his questions or this is a sort of game to entertain the SO community ;)

Little addition to all these posts.
Sometimes you may want to declare a
class and yet not know how to define
all of the methods that belong to that
class. For example, you may want to
declare a class called Writer and
include in it a member method called
write(). However, you don't know how to code write() because it is
different for each type of Writer
devices. Of course, you plan to handle
this by deriving subclass of Writer,
such as Printer, Disk, Network and
Console.

An abstract class can not be directly instantiated, but must be derived from to be usable. A class MUST be abstract if it contains abstract methods: either directly
abstract class Foo {
abstract void someMethod();
}
or indirectly
interface IFoo {
void someMethod();
}
abstract class Foo2 implements IFoo {
}
However, a class can be abstract without containing abstract methods. Its a way to prevent direct instantation, e.g.
abstract class Foo3 {
}
class Bar extends Foo3 {
}
Foo3 myVar = new Foo3(); // illegal! class is abstract
Foo3 myVar = new Bar(); // allowed!
The latter style of abstract classes may be used to create "interface-like" classes. Unlike interfaces an abstract class is allowed to contain non-abstract methods and instance variables. You can use this to provide some base functionality to extending classes.
Another frequent pattern is to implement the main functionality in the abstract class and define part of the algorithm in an abstract method to be implemented by an extending class. Stupid example:
abstract class Processor {
protected abstract int[] filterInput(int[] unfiltered);
public int process(int[] values) {
int[] filtered = filterInput(values);
// do something with filtered input
}
}
class EvenValues extends Processor {
protected int[] filterInput(int[] unfiltered) {
// remove odd numbers
}
}
class OddValues extends Processor {
protected int[] filterInput(int[] unfiltered) {
// remove even numbers
}
}

Solution - base class (abstract)
public abstract class Place {
String Name;
String Postcode;
String County;
String Area;
Place () {
}
public static Place make(String Incoming) {
if (Incoming.length() < 61) return (null);
String Name = (Incoming.substring(4,26)).trim();
String County = (Incoming.substring(27,48)).trim();
String Postcode = (Incoming.substring(48,61)).trim();
String Area = (Incoming.substring(61)).trim();
Place created;
if (Name.equalsIgnoreCase(Area)) {
created = new Area(Area,County,Postcode);
} else {
created = new District(Name,County,Postcode,Area);
}
return (created);
}
public String getName() {
return (Name);
}
public String getPostcode() {
return (Postcode);
}
public String getCounty() {
return (County);
}
public abstract String getArea();
}

What is Abstract class?
Ok! lets take an example you known little bit about chemistry we have an element carbon(symbol C).Carbon has some basic atomic structure which you can't change but using carbon you can make so many compounds like (CO2),Methane(CH4),Butane(C4H10).
So Here carbon is abstract class and you do not want to change its basic structure however you want their childrens(CO2,CH4 etc) to use it.But in their own way

An abstract class is a class that is declared abstract — it may or may not include abstract methods. Abstract classes cannot be instantiated, but they can be subclassed.
In other words, a class that is declared with abstract keyword, is known as abstract class in java. It can have abstract(method without body) and non-abstract methods (method with body).
Important Note:-
Abstract classes cannot be used to instantiate objects, they can be used to create object references, because Java's approach to run-time Polymorphism is implemented through the use of superclass references. Thus, it must be possible to create a reference to an abstract class so that it can be used to point to a subclass object. You will see this feature in the below example
abstract class Bike{
abstract void run();
}
class Honda4 extends Bike{
void run(){
System.out.println("running safely..");
}
public static void main(String args[]){
Bike obj = new Honda4();
obj.run();
}
}

An abstract class is one that isn't fully implemented but provides something of a blueprint for subclasses. It may be partially implemented in that it contains fully-defined concrete methods, but it can also hold abstract methods. These are methods with a signature but no method body. Any subclass must define a body for each abstract method, otherwise it too must be declared abstract.
Because abstract classes cannot be instantiated, they must be extended by at least one subclass in order to be utilized. Think of the abstract class as the generic class, and the subclasses are there to fill in the missing information.

Class which can have both concrete and non-concrete methods i.e. with and without body.
Methods without implementation must contain 'abstract' keyword.
Abstract class can't be instantiated.

It do nothing, just provide a common template that will be shared for it's subclass

Related

Java inheritance, Looping through each subclass

I'm trying to loop through multiple objects of different types that are all extending the same parent class. For example:
ArrayList<Enchant> enchants = new ArrayList<>();
Inside of the enchants array would be objects of classes that extend an Enchant class.
For example:
public class JumpBoost extends Enchant{
public static Item generateItem(){
return something;
}
}
Each object in the enchants ArrayList would have a method called generateItem().
I would like to loop through it using:
for(Enchant enchant : enchants){
enchant.generateItem()
}
I've already tried doing this, but with no luck due to the Enchant class not having the generateItem() method.
I essentially just need a way to group and loop through multiple objects of different types.
The idiomatic approach is to define an abstract generateItem() on Enchant. If you can't modify Enchant for some reason, you could create an abstract subclass of Enchant, and make all your subclasses inherit from that.
You could also try making an interface with generateItem() that all the subclasses implement and store the Interface type in the ArrayList.
If you still can't do any of those for whatever reason, you should rethink your design. But as a last resort, you can use reflection to dynamically access the generateItem of each individual subclass. Just call .getClass() and then lookup the method and invoke it.
You can use polymorphism to solve that problem.
First define the base class/abstract class/interface with the method generateItem(), derive specified classes and override/implement generateItem() method.
Here is implementation with interface:
interface Base{
void generateItem();
}
class Derived1 implements Base{
#Override
public void generateItem() {
System.out.println("generateItem() from Derived1");
}
}
class Derived2 implements Base{
#Override
public void generateItem() {
System.out.println("generateItem() from Derived2");
}
}
class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
List<Base> list = new ArrayList<>();
list.add(new Derived1());
list.add(new Derived2());
list.forEach(Base::generateItem);
}
}
The output is:
generateItem() from Derived1
generateItem() from Derived2
For more, you can read about polymorphism here.
Give Enchant an abstract method that subclasses need to implement. Making it abstract means Enchant doesn't need a definition of the method, but subclasses do.
public class Enchant {
public abstract Item generateItem();
}
The method should not be a static method as you have it in your code. It should be an instance method, since you're calling it on instances of Enchant.
Make enchant as interface or abstract class and extend it in the derived classes

Abstract class and interfaces in java

Any body can tell me
when to use the abstract class and when to use interface?
So many websites having only differences. I am not able to get these terms
"when to use the abstract class and when to use interface"
Thanks in Advance
Interfaces
An interface is kinda* like a template. Say for example that you want to make a 'Shape' class. Not all shapes use the same formulas for calculating area, so you just establish that there has to be a "getArea" method, but you don't define it.
A simple example:
public interface Shape
{
public int getArea();
}
Then you can have a class that implements the Shape interface:
public class Rectangle implements Shape
{
//this works for rectangles but not for circles or triangles
public int getArea()
{
return this.getLength() * this.getHeight();
}
}
Abstract Classes
Abstract methods can be extended by subclasses.* They differ from interfaces in that they can also contain defined methods.
You can still leave undefined methods, but you must label them abstract.
An example:
public abstract class Vegetable
{
public String vegName;
public boolean edible = true;
public Vegetable(final String vegName, final boolean edible)
{
this.vegName = vegName;
this.edible = edible;
}
public void printName()
{
System.out.println(this.vegName);
}
//to be determined later when implemented
public abstract void drawOnScreen();
}
Then we can extend this abstract class.
public class Carrot extends Vegetable
{
//we must define the abstract methods
public void drawOnScreen()
{
//we can still use our other methods
this.printName();
//do some other thing that is specific to this class
}
}
Interfaces cannot contain implementation (at least prior to Java 8) so if you need "common" method implementation, you have to have it in a super class (be it abstract or concrete)
However, any class can have only one super class (but many interfaces). so an interface is the solution for polymorphism when you have a class that already got a super class

how to instance generic abstract class

I am trying to profile a ann algorithm written in Java that is implemented as a generic abstract class and I cant figure out how to instance it.
Eclipse gives me error "Cannot instantiate the type KdTree" which is not very helpful. Any ideas on how to instance this class so I can test it?
Class defination and constructor:
public abstract class KdTree<T> {
private KdTree(int dimensions, Integer sizeLimit) {
this.dimensions = dimensions;
}
}
My attempt to instance it:
public class test_robo {
public void run_test()
{
KdTree<Integer> tree = new KdTree<Integer>(1,1);
}
}
link to the full code for KdTree
http://robowiki.net/wiki/User:Rednaxela/kD-Tree
First of all, you cannot instantiate an abstract class.
I saw the code in the link you provided; there are few implementations of the base class KdTree<T> already in there.
WeightedSqrEuclid
WeightedManhattan
...
If that's not what you're looking for, extend the base class and implement all those abstract methods as you wish.
You cannot instantiate an abstract class directly. The reason it is declared abstract is that it is not meant to be used by itself - you have to provide an implementation of its abstract methods first.
You need to inherit your own class from the abstract base, implement its abstract methods, and then instantiate your class. An instance of your class is automatically an instance of its abstract base.
public class ProfilerTree extends KdTree<Integer> {
public ProfilerTree(int dimensions, Integer sizeLimit) {
super(dimensions, sizeLimit);
}
...
// Implement abstract methods of KdTree<Integer> here
}
...
KdTree<Integer> tree = new ProfilerTree(1,1);
you can't instantiate an abstract class. Abstract actually means it doesn't make sense on its own so it always has to be extended and its methods implemented.
Unlike interfaces, abstract classes can contain fields that are not static and final, and they can contain implemented methods. Such abstract classes are similar to interfaces, except that they provide a partial implementation, leaving it to subclasses to complete the implementation. If an abstract class contains only abstract method declarations, it should be declared as an interface instead.
Multiple interfaces can be implemented by classes anywhere in the class hierarchy, whether or not they are related to one another in any way. Think of Comparable or Cloneable, for example.
By comparison, abstract classes are most commonly subclassed to share pieces of implementation. A single abstract class is subclassed by similar classes that have a lot in common (the implemented parts of the abstract class), but also have some differences (the abstract methods).
see http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/abstract.html
You can instantiate it by constructing an anonymous subclass, like so:
KdTree<Integer> tree = new KdTree<Integer>(1,1)
{
#Override
public void myAbstractMethodName()
{
//do something!
}
};
Otherwise, you can generate your own implementation:
private class KdTreeSub extends KdTree<Integer>
{
public KdTreeSub()
{
super(1, 1);
}
}
And later call it
public void myMethod()
{
...
KdTree<Integer> kdtree = new KdTreeSub();
...
}
The reason for this is that abstract classes are not complete classes. They are missing parts of them, usually a method. This method is marked with the "abstract" identifier:
public abstract int read();
The idea behind this is that you can construct a class that handles other parts:
public byte[] read(int len)
{
byte[] b = new byte[len];
for(int i = 0; i < b.length; i++) b[i] = read();
return b;
}
And simplify creating new classes.
The class, as it stands, was not meant to be instantiated. It's meant to store boilerplate code for concrete implementations. There are 4 of them in your link, starting with WeightedSqrEuclid.
You can either instantiate those, simply by e.g. new WeightedSqrEuclid<Integer>(1,1), or, if you want to profile the general code, write your own class extending KdTree.
However, in the latter case you should either create your subclass in the same file, or change a constructor of KdTree to at least protected. This is because, to create a subclass of this type, you need to call one of the constructors of KdTree in your implementation.

How to call abstract class methods to another class in java

can anybody tell me that. how can I call abstract class method to my own class in java?
thanks in advance
First of all look at you abstract class, it shall contain abstract methods and real methods. In the following sample the Foo class has an abstract method (FooMethod) and a real method (Yeee).
public abstract class Foo {
public abstract int FooMethod(int i);
public int Yeeee() {
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
int res = FooMethod(i);
// Do whatever
}
}
}
Abstract class are not meant to be directly used, so we have to inherit from them with a concrete class. The following inherits from the abstract (implementing the abstract method)
public class Bar extends Foo {
public int FooMethod(int i) {
// do something with i
}
public static void main (string [] args) {
Bar obj = new Bar();
obj.Yeeee();
}
}
Note: when in the main you call obj.Yeee() the base class method gets invoked, but in place of the abstract FooMethod, your own new implementation is used.
This is just the tip of the iceberg with abstract classes, but roughly should point you to the right direction.
Please take a good read here is a good tutorial and should give you some initial wisdom about inheritance and abstract classes.
You need to first create a subclass of the abstract class. This will then contain the methods of that abstract class. You use the "extends" keyword.
For example:
public class MyClass extends AbstractClass
{
//class content here...
}
For methods in abstract classes you need not to create the instance of the abstract class
So after importing the package in which the abstract class is present you can just call the method as below
YourAbstractClassName.methodName(args if any);
since abstract classes cant be instanciated in Java, You cant have member functions in this class and if you want to have one than their is a logical problem. However if you want to call the static methods, you can simply call them using class name, i.e.
YourClassName.fuctionName(parameters if any);
Do you mean how to implement that method in your class ?
if that is what you want to understand
then you just have to extend your class with the abstract one
for example
abstract class GraphicObject {....}
class Circle extends GraphicObject { ... }
try http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/abstract.html
You can call the method in abstract class by creating an
object of subclasss of the abstract class
or
if u want to call from the abstract class then you have to make your method static then you can call from main method like
Abstract_className.methodName()

implementing abstract methods/classes in java

Can I implement abstract methods in an abstract base class A in java?
If the answer is yes and there is an implemented abstract method in a base class A and there is a derived class B from A (B is not abstract). Does B still has to implement that base abstract method?
If I understand your question correctly, Yes.
public abstract class TopClass {
public abstract void methodA();
public abstract void methodB();
}
public abstract class ClassA extends TopClass {
#Override
public void methodA() {
// Implementation
}
}
public class ClassB extends ClassA {
#Override
public void methodB() {
// Implementation
}
}
In this example, ClassB will compile. It will use it's own implementation of methodB(), and ClassA's implementation of methodA(). You could also override methodA() in ClassB if desired.
You could have two abstract classes, X and Y, where Y extends X. In that case it could make sense for Y to implement an abstract method of X, while still being abstract. Another non-abstract class Z could extend Y. However, in your example, for A to implement its own abstract methods is a contradiction, the point of making them abstract is so it doesn't provide implementations, it just specifies what the method signatures should look like.
If you implement an abstract method it's not really abstract any more, so no.
Abstract classes can have regular methods. If you want to implement some of the methods of class A and leave rest of the methods abstract, you can do this. However, abstract methods cannot have a body, therefore if you mark a method as abstract, then it has to be implemented by a subclass, you can't implement them in the abstract class. However, you can have an abstract class without abstract methods, then subclass only needs to extend it.
Yes, you can implement abstract methods in a class which is declared as abstract. If a class is declared abstract that does not mean all its method must be abstract.
For a concrete sub class, it is not mandatory to implement the abstract methods that are already implemented by one of their super class.
No. Abstract methods are meant to be defined by the subclass(es). For more information, see Abstract Methods and Classes. However, you can define a method in the base class and have the subclass(es) override it, if required.
Yes, but it can't be abstract any more. Abstract means there is no implementation.
What you can do is:
interface I {
void meth();
}
//and
abstract class A implements I {
public void meth() {
//implementation
}
}
Or:
abstract class A {
public abstract void meth();
}
//and
abstract class B extends A {
public void meth() {
}
}
If A already has an implementation, you can override it in B (if B is concrete), because B inherits that default implementation from A.

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