Learning java 8 default methods . This link like any other resource on internet says
In ‘the strictest sense’, Default methods are a step backwards because they allow you to ‘pollute’ your interfaces with code. But they provide the most elegant and practical way to allow backwards compatibility. It made it much easier for Oracle to update all the Collections classes and for you to retrofit your existing code for Lambda.
My understanding is that java 8 dev/designers provided the default method in interfaces so that all implementing class does not have to unnecessarily override same behavior, hence provide backward compatibility. For example :- if ForEach method would not have been default method, every collection implementing class had to implement it. Agreed .
To overcome that we could have had one class providing implementation of these default methods and then implementing class like arraylist etc could have extended that. This way we could have statisfy both java fundamentals i.e reusability and abstraction i.e keeping the interface pollution less
I am sure java 8 dev/designer have already thought about this as they are much more learned and i am missing something here. Can someone help here so that we developers can also be on top of it as this major change?
Your suggestion would work only for standard JDK classes (since they usually extends some base classes such as
AbstractCollection
andAbstractList
, were the implementation of the new methods can be added).What about custom classes that implement JDK interfaces? If, for example, you have a class that implements
List
but doesn't extend some JDKList
implementation, you should be able to switch to Java 8 without having to implement new methods in your class.With
default
implementations of new methods in theList
interface, you don't have to touch your custom class. You can later add a custom implementation to those methods if you are not satisfied by the default implementation.If there is a requirement to add new method to an interface, clients which use existing interface will be broken as classes needs to implement all methods in the interface.
In this scenario, default and static methods can be used. These methods can have body and clients don't need to implement them, so existing implementations work without any changes.
For example, if you want to enhance interfaces to add methods which accept lambda expressions, you can use default methods.
Before Java 8,
interfaces
could have onlyabstract methods
. The implementation of these methods has to be provided in a separate class. So, if a new method is to be added in aninterface
then its implementation code has to be provided in the class implementing the same interface.To overcome this issue, Java 8 has introduced the concept of
default methods
which allow the interfaces to have methods with implementation without affecting the classes that implement theinterface
.The
default methods
were introduced to provide backward comparability so that existinginterfaces
can use the lambda expressions without implementing the methods in the implementation class.Default methods
are also known asdefender methods
orvirtual extension methods
.