abstract
Name
oo::abstract — a class that does not allow direct instances of itself
Synopsis
package require tcl::oo
oo::abstract method ?
arg ...?
Class hierarchy
oo::object → oo::class → oo::abstract Description
Abstract classes are classes that can contain definitions, but which cannot be directly manufactured; they are intended to only ever be inherited from and instantiated indirectly. The characteristic methods of
oo::class (
create and
new) are not exported by an instance of
oo::abstract.
Note that oo::abstract is not itself an instance of oo::abstract.
Constructor
The
oo::abstract class does not define an explicit constructor; this means that it is effectively the same as the constructor of the
oo::class class.
Destructor
The
oo::abstract class does not define an explicit destructor; destroying an instance of it is just like destroying an ordinary class (and will destroy all its subclasses).
Exported methods
The
oo::abstract class defines no new exported methods.
Non-exported methods
The
oo::abstract class explicitly states that
create,
createWithNamespace, and
new are unexported.
Examples
This example defines a simple class hierarchy and creates a new instance of it. It then invokes a method of the object before destroying the hierarchy and showing that the destruction is transitive.
oo::abstract create fruit {
method eat {} {
puts "yummy!"
}
}
oo::class create banana {
superclass fruit
method peel {} {
puts "skin now off"
}
}
set b [banana new]
$b peel → prints 'skin now off'
$b eat → prints 'yummy!'
set f [fruit new] → error 'unknown method "new"...' See also
oo::define,
oo::object Copyright © 2018 Donal K. Fellows