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Tom
Tom
20:06
can one get all instances of a class using reflection?
23 hours later
Tom
Tom
@Tekin you are here ;)
yeah, but I don't know the answer to your question sorry :(
Tom
Tom
@Tekin alright ;)
@Tom do you have an idea as to how I can get the recurring values of decimal values
Tom
Tom
20:08
@Tekin recurring values?
like in 0.3333333, 3 is a recurring value
Tom
Tom
@Tekin what about 0.4433?
thats not recurring
0.142857142857142857 is recurring
142857 is recurring
Tom
Tom
@Tekin ah well I really suck at maths, afraid not mate
alright :/
thanks anyways
20:28
hello
what happens in the background in case of this line below ?
List<String> myList = new LinkedList<String>();
how can an interface be equal with an object ?
list implements linkedlist?
list<String> interface is equal to an LinkedList object
I dont understand how can they equal, when an interface is just list of methods
yes, it's like Map m = new HashMap(); right?
if Map is an interface, than yes
i dont know by heart
yes but your interface is being equalized to a new object, which uses that interface as an interface
20:34
so far I understand
but how the interface can get over the implementation ?
you can't do Thread t = new LinkedList<String>(); for example
if thread were an interface,
even if thread was an interface, LinkedList must implement the Thread interface for you to create that new Thread variable
when they have just one common point the interface used by object
@user303352 what do you mean by this?
ok, I understand the interface must be implemented on the right side
and ?
what?
20:36
what happens next ?
OK, you're moving by memorizing things
do you know the differences between Interfaces and Classes?
what do you mean by "you are moving by memorizing things" sorry my weak english
yes
Interfaces makes up method declarations
Interfaces promise a list of methods. You can create a new instance of that interface by equalizing it to a class that implements that interface
Classes makes up method implementations
ok, but after the equalizing i have an interface which is full of empty methods ? No, but why ?
no you don't have an interface with empty methods
interfaces are NOT empty methods
the LinkedList class implements those methods
when you call a method from List, it will go to the LinkedList to find the method
20:42
I dont understand an mid step, how can the methods filled with implementation, when the methods of the interface has no implementation
i understand the starting end ending points, but i dont understand mechanism when an interface has no implementation
and
I'm telling you, interface makes sure that a class that implements the interface, implements the methods within the interface
when you create a new instance of the interface, it calls the method from the class (on the right side)
Interface i = new ClassThatImplementsInterface();
when you call a method from i, it will execute that method from the implementation found in ClassThatImplementsInterface
I saw this kind of lines several times, but I could not find their explanation, all reference on implementation is about unimplemented method, implementation of interfaces on classes, but there is no explanation about equalizing
you are not equalizing anything
you are creating a new instance of a class which implements the interface
you are using the interface as the object
why dont we using object instances, what is the benefit in case of interfaces ?
you can
the benefit is, you can equalize that interface to another instance of class that implements it
for example, ArrayList and LinkedList implements List
20:53
I made a mistake "all reference on interfaces" instead of "all reference on implementation"
you can do: List l = new LinkedList(), and then l = ArrayList()
however, you can't do: ArrayList l = new ArrayList(), then l = LinkedList();
because ArrayList != LinkedList
ok, wait pls, i have to think over you wrote :you are creating a new instance of a class which implements the interface

you are using the interface as the object
yes, then you can equalize that object to other classes which implement that interface
When you are using an interface, you are not limited to one single Class
fyi the word you're looking for is 'assign' not 'equalize' ...
I got it, so I understand almost everything, the benefits and the beginning and the goal
21:01
@artbristol yes right
so it is just like assigning reference ?
When you do List list1 = new ArrayList(), list1 is a reference to an object
Not an object itself
I see, just is this the in the case of interfaces as well ?
Well the reference can be typed, so it will only accept references to object that implement a particular interface
(I'm just repeating what Tekin was saying before)
thanks for the help guys
the time and effort!
it is clear for me
I have to go, thanks Tekin and artbristol, have nice day!
21:12
welcome
21:44
is it possible for me to extend a custom class to a static class like Math

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