I am trying to understand extending inner classes in Java. I have read around but nothing I found quite answers my question. So here goes…
I have…
public class Pie{
protected Slice[] slices;
// Pie constructor
public Pie(int n){
sliceGenerator(n)
}
private void sliceGenerator(int n){
slices = new Slice[n];
final float sweepAngle = 360.0f/(float)n;
float startAngle = 0;
for (int i=0;i<n;i++){
slices[i] = new Slice(startAngle);
startAngle += sweepAngle;
}
}
@Override
public String toString(){
for (Slice s:slices){
s.toString();
}
}
// Inner class...
public class Slice{
public Slice(float startAngle){
//set some private fields based on startAngle and generic pie
}
@Override
public String toString(){
return **string based on private fields**
}
}
}
Then I extend this…
public class ApplePie extends Pie{
protected Slice[] slices;
// Apple Pie constructor
public ApplePie(int n){
super(n);
}
// Inner class...
public class Slice extends Pie.Slice{
public Slice(float startAngle){
super(startAngle);
//set some **additional** private fields based on startAngle **specific to apple pie** appleness or something
}
@Override
public String toString(){
return **string based on apple pie specific private fields**
}
}
}
Now, when I make an Apple pie and call its toString method, like so…
ApplePie ap = new ApplePie(8);
System.out.println(ap.toString());
I do not get information about the apple pie slices, but information about the pie slices. It ignores my toString override, or more likely ignores my apple pie Slice. How can I arrange it such that apple pie slices refer to ApplePie?
Any help much appreciated! Sorry for pie references – it is the actual class I am working with…
I’ve changed your code to meet your requirements.
Your super class
Pieis about to create a new instance ofSlice, but the child class ApplePie’s Slice does not override theSlicemethod of its super class’.I added the functions below to enable the child class to create its own
Slice.Pie.java:
ApplePie.java:
Test:
The code will print
22222222