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JAVA Classes/Inheritance/Interfaces Quiz

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JAVA Classes Quiz

1- What is the difference between a class and an object?

A class is a blueprint or template for creating objects. An object is an

instance of a class.

2- What does instantiating mean?

Instantiating means creating an instance of a class: new Customer()

3- What is the difference between stack and heap memory? How are they managed?

Stack is used for storing primitive types (numbers, boolean and character) and variables that store references to objects in the heap. Variables stored in the stack are immediately cleared when they go out of scope (eg when a method finishes execution). Objects stored in the heap get removed later on when they’re no longer references. This is done by Java’s garbage collector.

4- What are the problems of procedural code? How does object-oriented programming help solve these problems?

Big classes with several unrelated methods focusing on different concerns and responsibilities. These methods often have several parameters. You often see the same group of parameters repeated across these methods. All you see is procedures calling each other passing arguments around.

By applying object-oriented programming techniques, we extract these repetitive parameters and declare them as fields in our classes. Our classes will then encapsulate both the data and the operations on the data (methods). As a result, our methods will have fewer parameters and our code will be cleaner and more reusable.

5- What is encapsulation?

Encapsulation is the first principle of object-oriented programming. It suggests that we should bundle the data and operations on the data inside a single unit (class).

6- Why should we declare fields as private?

How we store data in an object is considered an implementation detail. We may change how we store the data internally. Plus, we don’t want our objects to go into a bad state (hold bad data). That’s why we should declare fields as private and provide getters and or setters only if required. These setters can ensure our objects don’t go into a bad state by validating the values that are passed to them.

7- What is abstraction?

Abstraction is the second principle of object-oriented programming. It suggests that we should reduce complexity by hiding the unnecessary implementation details. As a metaphor, think of the remote control of your TV. All the complexity inside the remote control is hidden from you. It’s abstracted away. You just work with a simple interface to control your TV. We want our objects to be like our remote controls.

8- What is coupling?

Coupling represents the level of dependency between software entities (eg classes). The more our classes are dependent on each other, the harder it is to change them. Changing one class may result in several cascading and breaking changes.

9- How does the abstraction principle help reduce coupling?

By hiding the implementation details, we prevent other classes from getting affected when we change these details. For example, if the logic board and transistors inside a remote control change from one model to another, we’re not affected. We still use the same interface to work with our TV. Also, reducing these details and exposing fewer methods makes

our classes easier to use. For example, remote controls with fewer buttons are easier to use.

10- What are constructors?

Constructors are called when we instantiate our class. We use them to initialize our objects. Initialization means putting an object into an early or initial state (eg giving it initial values).

11- What is method overloading?

Method overloading means declaring a method with the same name but with different signatures. The number, type and order of its parameters will be different.

12- What are static methods?

Static methods are accessible via classes, not objects.

Java Inheritance Quiz

Questions

1- How can we have ClassA inherit from ClassB?

a) class ClassA inherits ClassB

b) class ClassA extends ClassB

c) class ClassA : ClassB

d) class ClassA implements ClassB

B

2- What will be printed on the console and why?

var point1 = new Point(1, 2); 
var point2 = new Point(1, 2);
System.out.println(point1.equals(point2));

False — even though point1 and point2 have the same coordinates, the default implementation of the equals() method compares objects for reference equality. These two objects are in two different locations in memory, that’s why the equals() method returns false.

3- What does hashCode() method of the Object class return?

The hashCode() methods returns a numeric value that is calculated based on the address of the object in memory.

4- What is a default constructor?

A constructor without any parameters. If we don’t create it, the Java compiler will automatically add one to our classes.

5- How can we add a constructor to the Customer class?

a) public Customer(String name) { }

b) public void Customer(String name) {}

c) public Constructor(String name) {}

d) public void Constructor(String name) {}

A — constructors don’t have a return type, not even void.

6- What is the super keyword?

The super keyword is a reference to the base or parent class. We can use it to access the members (fields and methods) or call the constructors of the base class. In contrast, the this keyword returns a reference to the current object.

7- What is the difference between private and protected access

modifiers?

Members marked with protected or private access modifiers are only accessible inside of a class. Protected members are inherited and are accessible by child (derived) classes. Private members are not.

8- How accessible is a field or method if it’s declared without an access modifier?

If we omit the access modifier, the member will have the default access modifier which makes that member public in package. In other words, that member will be public in the package but private outside of the package.

9- What is method overriding? How is it different from method overloading?

Method overriding means changing the implementation of an inherited method in a subclass. For example, we can override the equals() or hashCode() methods of the Object class. Method overloading means declaring a method with different signatures (different number, type and order of parameters).

10- What is the benefit of applying the @Override annotation when overriding a method?

It signals the Java compiler that we’re overriding a method in the base class and this helps the compiler check our code for correctness. It will ensure the signature of the method in the subclass matches the on declared in the base class. Also, if we remove this method from the base class, the compiler will let us know and we can remove the method in the subclass as well.

11- The Customer class inherits from the User class. Can we pass a Customer object to this method? Why?

public void print(User user) {}

Yes. We can pass an instance of any classes that inherit directly or indirectly from the User class. In this case, the customer object will get automatically upcast (meaning it’ll get converted to its base type — User). If we need to work with members of the customer object in this method, we need to explicitly downcast it by prefixing the object with (Customer).

12- What is the usage of the instanceof operator?

It tells us if an object is an instance of a class. We use it before casting an object to a different type to make sure we don’t get a casting exception.

13- What are the four principles of object-oriented programming?

- The four principles of object-oriented programming are:

- Encapsulation: bundling the data and operations on the data inside a single unit (class).

- Abstraction: reducing complexity by hiding unnecessary details (metaphor: the implementation detail of a remote control is hidden from us. We only work with its public interface.)

- Inheritance: a mechanism for reusing code.

- Polymorphism: a mechanism that allows an object to take many forms and behave differently. This will help us build extensible applications.

14- When do we use abstract classes?

An abstract class is a partially-implemented (half-cooked) class. We cannot instantiate them. But we use them to share some common code across their subclasses.

15- Can we have an abstract class without any abstract methods?

Yes! An abstract class does not need abstract methods. But if we mark a method as abstract, we should mark the class as abstract as well.

16- When do we use final classes?

Final classes cannot be inherited. We use them when we’ve made certain assumptions about a class and we want to prevent other classes extending our class and break those assumptions.

17- What is the diamond problem?

The diamond problem happens in languages that support multiple inheritance. If two classes (B, C) derive from A and are also the parents of another class (D), we see a diamond. If the top class (A) declares a method (eg toString) and its children (B and C) override this method, it’s not clear which implementation will be inherited by D.

18- Does Java support multiple inheritance?

No.

Interfaces Quiz

1- Why do we use interfaces?

We use interfaces to build loosely-coupled, extensible and testable

applications.

2- What is tightly-coupled code?

Tightly-coupled code is code that is hard to change because there is a strong dependency between the entities (eg classes) in the code. Changing one class may result in several cascading, breaking changes in the code.

3- Is this code loosely or tightly coupled and why?

public interface TaxCalculator  {} 
 public class TaxCalculator2018 implements TaxCalculator {} 
 public class TaxReport { 
 private TaxCalculator calculator;  
  
 public TaxReport() { 
 calculator = new TaxCalculator2018(); } 
}

Even though the type of the calculator field in TaxReport is an interface, we’re initializing this field to an instance of TaxCalculator2018 in the constructor. So, TaxReport is tightly coupled to TaxCalculator2018, which is an implementation, not an interface.

4- What is dependency injection?

Dependency injection refers to passing or injecting dependencies of a class.

5- What are the various types of dependency injection?

We can inject dependencies via constructors, setters and regular methods.

6- What is the Interface Segregation Principle (ISP)?

The Interface Segregation Principle (ISP) suggests that we should segregate or divide big, fat interfaces into smaller ones, each focusing on a single responsibility or capability. Smaller interfaces are less likely to change. Changes to one capability, will only affect a single interface and fewer classes that depend on that interface.

7- Why shouldn’t we declare fields, static or private methods in interfaces?

Fields, static and private methods are all about implementation. Interfaces are contracts and should not have any implementation.

8- What are the similarities and differences between interfaces and abstract classes?

Both are abstract concepts and we cannot instantiate them. Interfaces are contracts and should only have method declarations. Abstract classes are partially-implemented classes. We use them to share some common code across their derivates. The new features in Java allow writing code and logic in interfaces but this is a bad practice and should be avoided.

9- Should we extract an interface from every class? Why?

Blindly extracting interfaces doesn’t solve any problems nor is it considered a best practice. If you extract an interface from every single class, you’ll end up with an explosion of interfaces that don’t necessarily add any values. You should use interfaces in situations where you want to decouple a class from its dependencies so you can swap these dependencies. This allows building applications that are extensible and testable.


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