Re: Constructing an object from a superclass object

From:
"Mike Schilling" <mscottschilling@hotmail.com>
Newsgroups:
comp.lang.java.programmer
Date:
Wed, 17 Mar 2010 14:33:29 -0700
Message-ID:
<hnrhrc$gqq$1@news.eternal-september.org>
Eric Sosman wrote:

On 3/17/2010 3:04 PM, Michael Preminger wrote:

Hello!

I have an application where I use different types of persons.
Sometimes I need to convert a general Person (superclass) into a
specific one(subclass)

Is there a way to do it per constructor of the subclass, like:

public Subperson (Person person)
   without explicitly copying the member values from the super object
and destroying it later?

Or do I need to do it outside the class, like

Subperson sp = (Subperson) person ?

I would prefer the former, if it was possible.


    Since the Subperson has attributes that an ordinary Person
lacks, there's no way to transform a plain Person into a
Subperson.

    You can, as in your constructor example, build a brand-new
Subperson and copy (or derive) some of its data from a separate
Person object. But the Person object does not "become" a
Subperson thereby; the two objects have independent existences.

    On the other hand, if you start with a Subperson and want
to view it/him/her as a plain Person, that's easy: a Subperson
already *is* a Person, and has all a Person's attributes. And
if you have a Person reference that happens to point to an
actual Subperson instance (viewing it only as a Person), you
can "down-cast" to a Subperson again:

Person p = new Subperson("John Galt");
// do Person-like things with p
// can't get at Subperson-like things via p

This works because a Subperson *is* a Person.

Subperson s = (Subperson)p;
// now s and p refer to the same object, but
// s can access its Subpersonhood in addition
// to its Personhood

This works because the Subperson is still a Subperson, even
though you viewed it as merely a plain Person for a while.

Person p2 = new Person("Archibald Leach");
// do Person-like things with p2
Subperson s2 = (Subperson)p2; // ClassCastException!

This fails because a plain Person is *not* a Subperson.


If Subperson is Serializeable, you could

1. Serialize it to a ByteArrayOutputStream
2. Paying careful attention to the serialization spec, make the changes to
the resulting bytes that make it look like a serialized Subperson instead of
a serialized Person.
3. Deserailize it.

Not that I recommend this, mind you ...

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