Declaring classes
The following lines declare a new minimal Rectangle
class in Java. The code file for the sample is included in the java_9_oop_chapter_03_01
folder, in the example03_01.java
file.
class Rectangle { }
The class
keyword, followed by the class name (Rectangle
), composes the header of the class definition. In this case, we don't specify a parent class or superclass for the Rectangle
class. A pair of curly braces ({}
) encloses the class body after the class header. In the forthcoming chapters, we will declare classes that inherit from another class, and therefore, they will have a superclass. In this case, the class body is empty. The Rectangle
class is the simplest possible class we can declare in Java 9.
Note
Any new class you create that doesn't specify a superclass will be a subclass of the java.lang.Object
class. Thus, the Rectangle
class is a subclass of java.lang.Object
.
The following lines represent an equivalent way of creating the Rectangle
class. However, we don't need to specify that the class inherits from java.lang.Object
because it adds unnecessary boilerplate code. The code file for the sample is included in the java_9_oop_chapter_03_01
folder, in the example03_02.java
file.
class Rectangle extends java.lang.Object { }