Reputation: 1799
If I clone an instance of the following class, and overridde a method when instancing, will the clone have the overridden method? I haven't found anything regarding this behavior in https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/Cloneable.html nor https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/lang/Object.html#clone() .
public class ToBeCloned implements Cloneable{
public int returnInt() {
return 1;
}
public void printTest() {
System.out.println("returnInt():"+returnInt()+"\nToBeCloned Original");
}
@Override
public ToBeCloned clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
return (ToBeCloned) super.clone();
}
}
Upvotes: 4
Views: 85
Reputation: 59113
If you do something like
new ToBeCloned() { @Override...}
it is just a short way of creating a subclass and instantiating it. If you clone that instance, you get another instance of the same anonymous subclass, with all the same methods.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1799
The answer is yes, the clone will contain the overridden methods atleast in javaSE-1.8.
This is illustrated by the following programm and it's output:
public class OverridingMethods {
public static void main(final String[] args) {
final ToBeCloned toBeCloned1 = new ToBeCloned();
final ToBeCloned toBeCloned2 = new ToBeCloned() {
@Override
public int returnInt() {
return 2;
}
@Override
public void printTest() {
System.out.println("returnInt():"+returnInt()+"\nToBeCloned Overridden");
}
};
ToBeCloned toBeCloned3 = null;
ToBeCloned toBeCloned4 = null;
ToBeCloned toBeCloned5 = null;
try {
toBeCloned3 = toBeCloned1.clone();
toBeCloned4 = toBeCloned2.clone();
toBeCloned5 = toBeCloned4.clone();
} catch (final CloneNotSupportedException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
toBeCloned1.printTest();
toBeCloned2.printTest();
toBeCloned3.printTest();
toBeCloned4.printTest();
toBeCloned5.printTest();
}
}
The output of the programm is the following:
returnInt():1
ToBeCloned Original
returnInt():2
ToBeCloned Overridden
returnInt():1
ToBeCloned Original
returnInt():2
ToBeCloned Overridden
returnInt():2
ToBeCloned Overridden
This proofs that the overridden method is kept, even if cloning already cloned instances.
Upvotes: 2