Delegation Versus Inheritance in java

Inheritance in JAVA programming is the process by which one class takes the property of another other class. i.e. the new classes, known as derived or super class, take over the attributes and behavior of the pre-existing classes, which are referred to as base classes or child class.

Inheritance is used to create a hierarchical-type code structure that tries to keep as much “common” code near the top of the hierarchy. In small, static systems, inheritance can be ok. But large inheritance chains can also lead to hard-to-maintain code. Read up on design patterns that favor composition over inheritance for more info when to use inheritance and when not to.

Delegation is simply passing a duty off to someone/something else.Delegation is alternative to inheritance. Delegation means that you use an object of another class as an instance variable, and forward messages to the instance. It is better than inheritance because it makes you to think about each message you forward, because the instance is of a known class, rather than a new class, and because it doesn’t force you to accept all the methods of the super class: you can provide only the methods that really make sense.Delegation can be viewed as a relationship between objects where one object forwards certain method calls to another object, called its delegate. Delegation can also a powerful design/reuse technique. The primary advantage of delegation is run-time flexibility – the delegate can easily be changed at run-time. But unlike inheritance, delegation is not directly supported by most popular object-oriented languages, and it doesn’t facilitate dynamic polymorphism.

Here is a simple example:

class ABC {
	     void methodHello()
    {
    System.out.println("hello");

    }

    void methodBye()
    {
     System.out.println("bye"); }
    }

class XYZ {
	     ABC obj = new ABC();

	 void methodHello()
        {
         obj.methodHello();
        }

        void methodBye()
        {
         obj.methodBye();
        }

}

public class VinayMain {
	     public static void main(String[] args) {
	         XYZ obj = new XYZ();
	         obj.methodHello();
	         obj.methodBye();
	     }
}

Sometimes, the choice between delegation and inheritance is driven by external factors such as programming language support for multiple inheritance or design constraints requiring polymorphism. Consider threads in Java. You can associate a class with a thread in one of two ways: either by extending (inheriting) directly from class Thread, or by implementing the Runnable interface and then delegating to a Thread object. Often the approach taken is based on the restriction in Java that a class can only extend one class (i.e., Java does not support multiple inheritance). If the class you want to associate with a thread already extends some other class in the design, then you would have to use delegation; otherwise, extending class Thread would usually be the simpler approach

 

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For Each loop in java 1.5

The for-each loop, or enhanced for loop, is new feature in JDK 1.5 to remove clutter and possible errors, in iterating over collections.This will not provide any new functionality .It is just making our code more easy.It allow to create one variable which will iterate over array or collection.By this we can do nested iteration.

JDK 5.0 provides a special kind of for loop for access through all the elements of it.

 
Syntax 

For(vaiable : collection){ Statements; } 
Example:

  int[] a={1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0};
Using for Each loop :-

  for(int i : a){
    System.out.println(i);</em>
  }  

using Simple for loop :-

for(Iterator itr = a.iterator(); i.hasNext(); ) {
  String item = i.next();
  System.out.println(item);one more example will clear you more on this.

Using Foreach with Arrays  :-

String[] letters = { "v", "i", "n" , "a" , "y" };
for (String letter: letters)
   System.out.println(letter.charAt(0));

Unexpected Null pointer exception in Oracle ADF

Recently I faced an issue in Adf application. The .jspx page giving null pointer exception after doing some operation in page. And every variable have contain their value. I have try to run application many time in debug mode to replicate the problem but not able to find. Then I find in ADF application when ever You make any Input or Output text in jspx. page it automatically make validator. af:validator is automatically generated when you create a form component. You can check that validator by clicking the Source button. Solution of the problem is – to comment the validator part in xml part.
You will find error in ADF class like this.

java.lang.NullPointerException
at oracle.jbo.uicli.binding.JUCtrlValueBinding.validateAttributeValue(JUCtrlValueBinding.java:757)

For Solution you should go to seach option and Search for af:validator in full application.Where you can find this tag. Make it comment like example I have given below.

null1

After applying the solution application doesn’t give Null pointer exception