February 23, 2004 Consider sealed modules | ||||
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It may be useful to seal a module by declaring it final. final module <name>; What does it mean to seal a module? It would be equivalent to declaring all leaf-level classes in the module final. In other words, a mechanism to prevent intermodule inheritance of classes. Note that the "sealing" applies only to classes (stateful) entities, not to interfaces. The component software people write a lot about the problems associated with inheritance of implementation (state) in large software systems, and I have found this to be true in some of the code I've written. But I still think it very useful in smaller systems, and doing away with it, as Heron does, or as James Gosling has said he ought to have in Java, is a bit too radical IMHO. With the possibility of sealing a module, we could easily control intermodule inheritance relationships. Matthias |
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