AbstractCollection
is one of the Java utility classes. Its purpose is to remember items,
so you can add or delete items from the collection. One example of a
subclass would be ArrayList
, but there are others like
HashSet.
Some of the methods it has are:
size()
isEmpty()
The AbstractCollection
is “abstract” because it does not specify a
way of remember items. However, once you know the number of items, it
is easy to determine if the collection is empty - it has zero
items. That means some of the code for AbstractCollection
looks like
this:
public abstract int size();
public boolean isEmpty() {
return size() == 0;
}
The major use of abstract classes is that it allows you to build lots of other functions on top of one function that you might not yet know.
The Java UI tutorial has an example showing abstract classes like JComponent.
This figure shows (among other things) that everything in the user
interface inherits from an abstract JComponent
class, and that
all menu items inherit from a JAbstractButton
class.
The getAccessibleName
method (line
360)
is one example of a non-abstract method in JComponent
. It sees if
the object has a name, and if it does not, it tries to make one by
looking at other components like the title of the current window. If
that failes, it looks for the JLabel
property and uses that (if
possible). Nothing in this sequence is abstract, so this method can be
written once in the JComponent class and does not need to be
re-written in subclasses.