Can we have a class inside an interface which has different methods of the interface implemented in it. I have a doubt here that why Java allows writing Inner classes inside interfaces and where can we use it.
In the program below I have written a class inside Interface and implemented the methods of the interface. In the implementation class of the interface I have just called the inner class methods.
public interface StrangeInterface
{
int a=10;int b=5;
void add();
void sub();
class Inner
{
void add()
{
int c=a+b;
System.out.println("After Addition:"+c);
}
void sub()
{
int c=a-b;
System.out.println("After Subtraction:"+c);
}
}
}
abstract public class StrangeInterfaceImpl implements I {
public static void main(String args[])
{
StrangInterface.Inner i=new StrangeInterface.Inner();
i.add();
i.sub();
}
}
You can define a class inside an interface. Inside the interface, the inner class is implicitly
public static
.From JLS Section 9.1.4:
From JLS Section 9.5:
The only restriction on the inner class defined inside the interface or any other class, for that matter, is that, you have to access them using the enclosing member name.
Apart from that, there is no relation between them. The inner class will result in completely a different class file after compilation.
For e.g., if you compile the following source file:
Two class files will be generated: