Object Oriented Programming Basics – Arma Reforger
Lou Montana (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "</syntaxhighlight>" to "</enforce>") |
Lou Montana (talk | contribs) m (Text replacement - "overriden" to "overridden") |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
A member variable is a variable scoped to that object instance. | A member variable is a variable scoped to that object instance. | ||
It is usually {{hl|protected}} but can be {{hl|private}} (see {{ | It is usually {{hl|protected}} but can be {{hl|private}} (see {{Link|#Visibility}}); a public member is usually a bad practice - it is best to use {{Link|#Getter and Setter|Getters and Setters}}. | ||
See [[Arma Reforger:Scripting: Values]] for naming prefixes. | See [[Arma Reforger:Scripting: Values]] for naming prefixes. | ||
Line 154: | Line 154: | ||
{{Feature|informative| | {{Feature|informative| | ||
The parent class constructor (see the {{ | The parent class constructor (see the {{Link|#Inheritance}} chapter below) is automatically called. | ||
An inheriting class can only '''add''' new arguments to those accepted by the base class constructor. | An inheriting class can only '''add''' new arguments to those accepted by the base class constructor. | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 168: | Line 168: | ||
m_iValue = 50; | m_iValue = 50; | ||
} | } | ||
} | } | ||
MyClass instance = new MyClass(); // instance.m_iValue = 50 | MyClass instance = new MyClass(); // instance.m_iValue = 50 | ||
Line 183: | Line 183: | ||
m_iValue = value; | m_iValue = value; | ||
} | } | ||
} | } | ||
MyClass instance = new MyClass(42); // prints "Instance created with value 42" | MyClass instance = new MyClass(42); // prints "Instance created with value 42" | ||
Line 217: | Line 217: | ||
This is the default visibility - the member is accessible from inside as well as outside the object. As the default visibility, it does not need a keyword. | This is the default visibility - the member is accessible from inside as well as outside the object. As the default visibility, it does not need a keyword. | ||
<enforce> | <enforce noguess> | ||
class ParentClass | class ParentClass | ||
{ | { | ||
Line 378: | Line 378: | ||
</enforce> | </enforce> | ||
It can even call an | It can even call an overridden one: | ||
<enforce> | <enforce> | ||
class ParentClass | class ParentClass |
Latest revision as of 14:36, 9 November 2023
Class vs Object
A class is a definition of an object; it can be seen as the blueprint for an object's creation. An object is an instance of a class, as in an entity created following the class' specifics.
An object can hold values, known as member variables, and functions, known as methods.
A class can have variables and methods too, known as static variables and methods.
Member Variable
A member variable is a variable scoped to that object instance. It is usually protected but can be private (see Visibility); a public member is usually a bad practice - it is best to use Getters and Setters.
See Arma Reforger:Scripting: Values for naming prefixes.
Method
A method is an object's function or a class' (static) function - it can be seen as a "member function".
A method has a signature, i.e a return type, a name and a parameters list - e.g:
Two methods can be named identically as long as they differ by their parameters.
Getter and Setter
A Getter describes a method that gets the value of a property;
A Setter describes a method that sets it.
Constructor
A constructor method is a specific one: it is a method that is automatically called on object instanciation, and can be with or without arguments.
There can be zero to one constructor.
A constructor is declared as a method having the same name as its class.
Destructor
A destructor method is a specific one: it is a method that is automatically called on object destruction, and exists only without arguments. There can be zero to one destructor.
A destructor is declared as a method having the same name as its class, starting with a tilde ~.
Visibility
Visibility is the accessibility of an object's or class' method/variable from the "outside" of that object/class.
public
This is the default visibility - the member is accessible from inside as well as outside the object. As the default visibility, it does not need a keyword.
protected
This is a "hierarchy" visibility - the member is accessible from the object and objects of inheriting classes. It uses the protected keyword.
private
This is the strictest visibility - only the object can access this member. This is useful to e.g cut code in smaller methods and not clutter the list of available methods on this object from the outside. It uses the private keyword.
Inheritance
Inheritance is the transmission of parent properties to a child class. Class inheritance is written with :. A class can only inherit from one class.
override
A non-private (protected or public) inherited method can be overridden thanks to the override keyword:
super
An inherited object can call its parent's non-private (protected or public) method:
It can even call an overridden one: