Consider an interface that you have developed called
Suppose that, at a later time, you want to add a third method to
If you make this change, all classes that implement the old
Try to anticipate all uses for your interface and to specify it completely from the beginning. Given that this is often impossible, you may need to create more interfaces later. For example, you could create a
Now users of your code can choose to continue to use the old interface or to upgrade to the new interface.
for more detail visti
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/nogrow.html
DoIt
:public interface DoIt {
void doSomething(int i, double x);
int doSomethingElse(String s);
}
DoIt
, so that the interface now becomes:public interface DoIt {
void doSomething(int i, double x);
int doSomethingElse(String s);
boolean didItWork(int i, double x, String s);
}
DoIt
interface will break because they don't implement the interface anymore. Programmers relying on this interface will protest loudly.Try to anticipate all uses for your interface and to specify it completely from the beginning. Given that this is often impossible, you may need to create more interfaces later. For example, you could create a
DoItPlus
interface that extends DoIt
:public interface DoItPlus extends DoIt {
boolean didItWork(int i, double x, String s);
}
for more detail visti
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/nogrow.html
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