Books
Fouad Sabry

Object Oriented Programming Inheritance

What Is Object Oriented Programming Inheritance

In object-oriented programming, inheritance refers to the process of building one object or class off of another object or class while preserving the functionality of the original object or class. The formation of a hierarchy of classes can also be characterized as the process of deriving new classes from existing ones, such as a super class or a base class, and then organizing those classes into a hierarchy. An object that is generated through inheritance, known as a “child object,” inherits all of the characteristics and actions of its “parent object,” with the following exceptions: the constructors, destructors, overloaded operators, and friend functions of the base class. This is the case with the majority of class-based object-oriented programming languages. Inheritance gives programmers the ability to construct classes that are built upon existing classes, to specify a new implementation while preserving the same behaviors, to reuse code, and to independently extend original software via public classes and interfaces. Inheritance also enables programmers to create classes that are built upon existing classes. A directed acyclic graph is produced when the relationships between objects or classes are established through inheritance.

How You Will Benefit

(I) Insights, and validations about the following topics:

Chapter 1: Inheritance (object-oriented programming)

Chapter 2: Class (computer programming)

Chapter 3: Method (computer programming)

Chapter 4: Object (computer science)

Chapter 5: Class-based programming

Chapter 6: Method overriding

Chapter 7: Interface (Java)

Chapter 8: Object-oriented design

Chapter 9: Object-oriented programming

Chapter 10: Multiple inheritance

(II) Answering the public top questions about object oriented programming inheritance.

(III) Real world examples for the usage of object oriented programming inheritance in many fields.

(IV) 17 appendices to explain, briefly, 266 emerging technologies in each industry to have 360-degree full understanding of object oriented programming inheritance' technologies.

Who This Book Is For

Professionals, undergraduate and graduate students, enthusiasts, hobbyists, and those who want to go beyond basic knowledge or information for any kind of object oriented programming inheritance.
76 printed pages
Original publication
2023
Publication year
2023
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Quotes

  • Diego Ormazábalhas quoted6 months ago
    Class Extensions, sometimes known as partial classes, have long existed in Smalltalk. Microsoft introduced partial classes with the release of the.NET framework 2, and both C# 2.0 and Visual Basic 2005 supported them.
  • Diego Ormazábalhas quoted6 months ago
    Some programming languages offer special support for mixins. Mixins are commonly used to offer the same methods to many classes.
  • Diego Ormazábalhas quoted6 months ago
    Comparatively speaking, abstract classes imply, promote, and necessitate derivation in order to be used at all. Implicitly, a non-subclassable class is concrete.
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