My understanding was that static variables and static methods are of a class, not of the class objects. So an Override
of a static method won't work in Java, as for overriding we need an instance of a class to be created. But I was trying something today that contradicted my knowledge of Java.
Please follow this code:
class Parent{
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Parent ");
}
}
class Child extends Parent{
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Child ");
}
}
public class StaticPractise{
public static void main(String[] args){
Parent.doIt();
Child.doIt();
}
}
The output of the above implementation is:
D:Rahul ShivsharanMyPractiseJAVA>java StaticPractise
In static method 'doit' of class Parent
In static method 'doit' of class Child
From this output I can understand that though the Child
class extends the Parent
class, the doit
methods are individual to each class as they are static
. So no overriding of them is allowed.
Now please follow the below code, where @Override
is added to the child's doIt
method:
class Parent{
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Parent ");
}
}
class Child extends Parent{
@Override // Adding this annotation here
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Child ");
}
}
public class StaticPractise{
public static void main(String[] args){
Parent.doIt();
Child.doIt();
}
}
The output of the above code gives a compilation error as follows:
D:Rahul ShivsharanMyPractiseJAVA>javac StaticPractise.java
StaticPractise.java:31: error: method does not override or implement a method from a supertype
@Override
^
1 error
Here it clearly says that the annotation Override
can't be applied in static
methods as they are not getting overridden.
Now please follow the below code, where Child
has no doIt
method:
class Parent{
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Parent ");
}
}
class Child extends Parent{ /* no doIt method */ }
public class StaticPractise{
public static void main(String[] args){
Parent.doIt();
Child.doIt();
}
}
The output is:
D:Rahul ShivsharanMyPractiseJAVA>java StaticPractise
In static method 'doit' of class Parent
In static method 'doit' of class Parent
Why does the above code compile and run? I was expecting a compilation error for method doit
for class Child, and I was expecting "Method not found". I don't understand.
Also please follow the below code. Here, the doIt
method in Parent
is now final
.
class Parent{
public static final void doIt(){ // now final
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Parent ");
}
}
class Child extends Parent{
public static void doIt(){
System.out.println("In static method 'doit' of class Parent ");
}
}
public class StaticPractise{
public static void main(String[] args){
Parent.doIt();
Child.doIt();
}
}
The output after running the above code is as follows:
D:Rahul ShivsharanMyPractiseJAVA>javac StaticPractise.java
StaticPractise.java:30: error: doIt() in Child cannot override doIt() in Parent
public static void doIt(){
^
overridden method is static,final
1 error
D:Rahul ShivsharanMyPractiseJAVA>
What I was expecting was that the above code should work fine as the doit
methods are static in each class, so even a final
keyword should not make any compilation error as the method is static
.
Please explain to me how method overriding works in static classes in Java.
- Can static methods be overridden? If yes, then how come annotating
@Override
fails?
- If static methods can't be overridden, then how come my 3rd code block runs fine?
- If static methods can't be overridden, then how come the
final
keyword makes a difference?
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/32112692/if-static-methods-cant-be-overridden-how-its-working-here-for-java