Polymorphism
There are two powerful aspects to inheritance.
One is code reuse. When you create a ListBox
class, you’re able to reuse some of the logic in the base
(Window
) class.
What is arguably more powerful, however, is the second aspect of
inheritance: polymorphism
.
Poly means many and morph
means form. Thus, polymorphism refers to being able to use many forms
of a type without regard to the details.
When the phone company sends your phone a ring signal, it does not know what type of phone is on the other end of the line. You might have an old-fashioned Western Electric phone which energizes a motor to ring a bell, or you might have an electronic phone which plays digital music.
As far as the phone company is concerned, it knows only about the
“base type” phone
and expects that any
“instance” of this type knows how to ring. When the phone
company tells your phone to ring, it simply
expects the phone to “do the right thing.” Thus, the
phone company treats your phone polymorphically.
Creating Polymorphic Types
Because a ListBox
is-a
Window
and a Button
is-a
Window
, we expect to be
able to use either of these types in situations that call for a
Window
. For example, a form might want to keep a
collection of all the instances of Window
it
manages so that when the form is opened, it can tell each of its
Windows
to draw itself. For this operation, the
form does not want to know which elements are list boxes and which
are buttons
; it just wants to tick through its collection and tell ...
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