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Home/ Questions/Q 505125
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:33:59+00:00 2026-05-13T06:33:59+00:00

I understand that neither a abstract class nor an interface can contain a method

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I understand that neither a abstract class nor an interface can contain a method that is both abstract and static because of ambiguity problems, but is there a workaround?

I want to have either an abstract class or an interface that mandates the inclusion of a static method in all of the classes that extend/implement this class/interface. Is there a way to do this in Java? If not, this may be my final straw with Java…

EDIT 1: The context of this problem is that I have a bunch of classes, call them Stick, Ball, and Toy for now, that have a bunch of entries in a database. I want to create a superclass/interface called Fetchable that requires a static method getFetchables() in each of the classes below it. The reason the methods in Stick, Ball, and Toy have to be static is because they will be talking to a database to retrieve all of the entries in the database for each class.

EDIT 2: To those who say you cannot do this in any language, that is not true. You can certainly do this in Ruby where class methods are inherited. This is not a case of someone not getting OO, this is a case of missing functionality in the Java language. You can try to argue that you should never need to inherit static (class) methods, but that is utterly wrong and I will ignore any answers that make such points.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:34:00+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:34 am

    You have a couple of options:

    1. Use reflection to see if the method exists and then call it.
    2. Create an annotation for the static method named something like @GetAllWidgetsMethod.

    3. As others have said, try to not use a static method.

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