Anonymous inner classes are declared and
instantiated at the same time, using the new operator with the name
of an existing class or interface. If you name a class, it will be
subclassed; if you name an interface, the anonymous class will extend
java.lang.Object
and implement the named
interface. The paradigm is:
b.addActionListener(new ActionListener( ) { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { showStatus("Thanks for pushing my second button!"); } });
Did you notice the });
by itself on the last line?
Good, because it’s important. The }
terminates the definition of the inner class, while the
)
ends the argument list to the
addActionListener
method; the single argument
inside the brackets is an argument of type
ActionListener
that refers to the one and only
instance created of your anonymous class. Example 13-2 contains a complete example.
Example 13-2. ButtonDemo2c.java
import java.applet.*; import java.awt.*; import java.awt.event.*; /** Demonstrate use of Button */ public class ButtonDemo2c extends Applet { Button b; public void init( ) { add(b = new Button("A button")); b.addActionListener(new ActionListener( ) { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { showStatus("Thanks for pushing my first button!"); } }); add(b = new Button("Another button")); b.addActionListener(new ActionListener( ) { public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { showStatus("Thanks for pushing my second button!"); } }); } }
The real benefit of these anonymous inner classes, by the way, is that they keep the action handling code in the same place that the GUI control is being instantiated. This saves a lot of looking back and forth to see what a GUI control really does.
Those ActionListener
objects have no instance
name and appear to have no class
name: is that possible? The former yes, but not the latter. In fact,
class names are assigned to anonymous inner classes by the compiler.
After compiling and testing ButtonDemo2c
with JDK
1.2, I list the directory in which I ran the program:
C:javasrcgui>ls -1 ButtonDemo2c* ButtonDemo2c$1.class ButtonDemo2c$2.class ButtonDemo2c.class ButtonDemo2c.htm ButtonDemo2c.java C:javasrcgui>
Those first two are the anonymous inner classes. Note that a different compiler might assign different names to them; it doesn’t matter to us. A word for the wise: don’t depend on those names!
Most IDEs (see Section 1.2) have drag-and-drop GUI builder tools that will make this task easier, at least for simpler projects.
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