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3.8. Inner Class Overview

The classes and interfaces we have seen so far in this chapter have all been top-level classes (i.e., they are direct members of packages, not nested within any other classes). Starting in Java 1.1, however, there are four other types of classes, loosely known as inner classes, that can be defined in a Java program. Used correctly, inner classes are an elegant and powerful feature of the Java language. These four types of classes are summarized here:

Static member classes

A static member class is a class (or interface) defined as a static member of another class. A static method is called a class method, so, by analogy, we could call this type of inner class a "class class," but this terminology would obviously be confusing. A static member class behaves much like an ordinary top-level class, except that it can access the static members of the class that contains it. Interfaces can be defined as static members of classes.

Member classes

A member class is also defined as a member of an enclosing class, but is not declared with the static modifier. This type of inner class is analogous to an instance method or field. An instance of a member class is always associated with an instance of the enclosing class, and the code of a member class has access to all the fields and methods (both static and non-static) of its enclosing class. There are several features of Java syntax that exist specifically to work with the enclosing instance of a member class. Interfaces can only be defined as static members of a class, not as non-static members.

Local classes

A local class is a class defined within a block of Java code. Like a local variable, a local class is visible only within that block. Although local classes are not member classes, they are still defined within an enclosing class, so they share many of the features of member classes. Additionally, however, a local class can access any final local variables or parameters that are accessible in the scope of the block that defines the class. Interfaces cannot be defined locally.

Anonymous classes

An anonymous class is a kind of local class that has no name; it combines the syntax for class definition with the syntax for object instantiation. While a local class definition is a Java statement, an anonymous class definition (and instantiation) is a Java expression, so it can appear as part of a larger expression, such as method invocation. Interfaces cannot be defined anonymously.

Java programmers have not reached a consensus on the appropriate names for the various kinds of inner classes. Thus, you may find them referred to by different names in different situations. In particular, static member classes are sometimes called "nested top-level" classes, and the term "nested classes" may refer to all types of inner classes. The term "inner classes" is itself overloaded and sometimes refers specifically to member classes. On other occasions, "inner classes" refers to member classes, local classes, and anonymous classes, but not static member classes. In this book, I use "inner class" to mean any class other than a standard top-level class and the names shown previously to refer to the individual types of inner classes.



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