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When a class declares a static method m, the declaration of m hides any method m', where the signature of m is a subsignature of the signature of m' and the declaration of m' is both in the superclasses and superinterfaces of the declaring class and also would otherwise be accessible to code in the declaring class (Java Language Specification, §8.4.8.2 "Hiding (by Class Methods)"[[JLS 2005]]).

An instance method defined in a subclass overrides another instance method in the superclass when both have the same name, number and type of parameters, and return type.

Hiding and overriding differ in the determination of which method is invoked from a call site. For overriding, the method invoked is determined at runtime on the basis of the specific object instance in hand. For hiding, the method invoked is determined at compile time on the basis of the specific qualified name or method invocation expression used at the call site. Although the Java language provides unambiguous rules for determining which method is invoked, the results of these rules are often unexpected. Additionally, programmers sometimes expect method overriding in cases where the language provides method hiding. Consequently, programs must never declare a class method that hides a method declared in a superclass or superinterface.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant example, the programmer hides the static method rather than overriding it. Consequently, the code invokes the displayAccountStatus() method of the superclass at two different call sites instead of invoking the superclass method at one call site and the subclass method at the other.

class GrantAccess {
  public static void displayAccountStatus() {
    System.out.println("Account details for admin: XX");
  }
}

class GrantUserAccess extends GrantAccess {
  public static void displayAccountStatus() {
    System.out.println("Account details for user: XX");
  }
}

public class StatMethod {
  public static void choose(String username) {
    GrantAccess admin = new GrantAccess();
    GrantAccess user = new GrantUserAccess();
    if (username.equals("admin")) {
      admin.displayAccountStatus();
    } else {
      user.displayAccountStatus();
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    choose("user");
  }
}

Compliant Solution

In this compliant solution, the programmer declares the displayAccountStatus() methods as instance methods, by removing the static keyword. Consequently, the dynamic dispatch at the call sites produces the expected result. The @Override annotation indicates intentional overriding of the parent method.

class GrantAccess {
  public void displayAccountStatus() {
    System.out.print("Account details for admin: XX");
  }
}

class GrantUserAccess extends GrantAccess {
  @Override
  public void displayAccountStatus() {
    System.out.print("Account details for user: XX");
  }
}

public class StatMethod {
  public static void choose(String username) {
    GrantAccess admin = new GrantAccess();
    GrantAccess user = new GrantUserAccess();

    if (username.equals("admin")) {
      admin.displayAccountStatus();
    } else {
      user.displayAccountStatus();
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    choose("user");
  }
}

The methods inherited from the superclass can also be overloaded in a subclass. Overloaded methods are new methods unique to the subclass and neither hide nor override the superclass method [[Tutorials 2008]].

Technically, a private method cannot be hidden or overridden. There is no requirement that private methods with the same signature in the subclass and the superclass bear any relationship in terms of having the same return type or throws clause, the necessary conditions for hiding [[JLS 2005]]. Consequently, hiding cannot occur when private methods have different return types or throws clauses.

Exceptions

MET07-EX0: Occasionally an API provides hidden methods. Invoking those methods is not a violation of this rule, provided that all invocations of hidden methods use qualified names or method invocation expressions that explicitly indicate which specific method is invoked. If the displayAccountStatus() were a hidden method, for example, the following implementation of the choose() method would be an acceptable alternative:

  public static void choose(String username) {
    if (username.equals("admin")) {
      GrantAccess.displayAccountStatus();
    } else {
      GrantUserAccess.displayAccountStatus();
    }
  }

Risk Assessment

Confusing overriding and hiding can produce unexpected results.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MET07-J

low

unlikely

medium

P2

L3

Automated Detection

Automated detection of violations of this rule is straightforward. Automated determination of cases where method hiding is unavoidable is infeasible. However, determining whether all invocations of hiding or hidden methods explicitly indicate which specific method is invoked is straightforward.

Bibliography

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[[Bloch 2005

AA. Bibliography#Bloch 05]]

Puzzle 48. All I get is static

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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[[JLS 2005

AA. Bibliography#JLS 05]]

[§8.4.8.2, Hiding (by Class Methods)

http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/classes.html#8.4.8.2]

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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[[Tutorials 2008

AA. Bibliography#Tutorials 08]]

[Overriding and Hiding Methods

http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/java/IandI/override.html]

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>


      05. Methods (MET)      MET08-J. Ensure objects that are equated are equatable

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