Title: Object Orientated Programming
1Object Orientated Programming
An Introduction to Java
2- For the most accurate and up-to-date tutorials,
please access the latest version from Sun's
official website for the Java SE Tutorials (Last
Updated 9/23/2009), which can be found at
http//java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial.
3Features of OOP
- Classes
- Objects
- Instantiation
- Inheritance
- Membership Functions
4More OOP Features
- Data Encapsulation
- Polymorphism
- Operator Overloading
- Message Passing
- Software Re-Use
5History of Java
- Java
- Java, first released by Sun Microsystems in 1994
- Originally for intelligent consumer-electronic
devices - Then used for creating Web pages with dynamic
content - Now also used for
- Develop large-scale enterprise applications
- Enhance WWW server functionality
- Provide applications for consumer devices (cell
phones, etc.)
6The Emergence of Java
- In the past decade Java has emerged in wide use
partially because of its similarity to C and to
C - Perhaps more important is its implementation
using a virtual machine that is intended to run
code unchanged on many different platforms. - This last feature has made it very attractive to
larger development shops with heterogeneous
environments.
7Key Benefits of Java
- Java is write once, run anywhere
- architecture neutral
- portable across different platforms
- Due to Java Virtual Machine (JVM)
- Security features
- highly configurable security levels prevent any
piece of Java code doing harm to the host system - Network-centric platform
- easy to work with resources across a network and
to create network based applications - Object Oriented
- an interacting collection of independent software
components - dynamic extensible programs
8Key Benefits of Java
- Internationalisation
- uses 16 bit Unicode characters that represents
the phonetic and ideographic character sets of
the entire world - Performance
- although an interpreted language Java programs
run almost as fast as native C, C programs - Simple and easy to develop
- powerful well designed set of APIs
9Java Class Libraries
- Classes
- Include methods that perform tasks
- Return information after task completion
- Used to build Java programs
- Java contains class libraries
- Known as Java APIs (Application Programming
Interfaces)
10 Basics of a Typical Java Environment
- Java programs normally undergo five phases
- Edit
- Programmer writes program (and stores program on
disk) - Compile
- Compiler creates bytecodes from program
- Load
- Class loader stores bytecodes in memory
- Verify
- Verifier ensures bytecodes do not violate
security requirements - Execute
- Interpreter translates bytecodes into machine
language
11 Typical Java environment.
12Java
- In discussing java it is important to distinguish
between - The Java Programming Language
- The Java Virtual Machine
- The Java Platform
13Java
- The Java Programming Language is the language in
which Java applications, applets , servlets and
components are written. It is an object
orientated language like C. - The Java Virtual Machine, (or java interpreter)
is the crucial piece of every Java installation.
Java applications are portable, but they are only
portable to platforms to which a java virtual
machine ( or java interpreter ) has been ported. - 3. The Java Platform . All programs written in
Java rely on the set of predefined classes that
comprise the java platform. These classes are
organised into related groups known as packages.
The java platform defines packages for
functionality such as input/output, networking,
graphics, user interface creation.
14JVM
Compiled by Java compiler
Source Code
Application runs
15JVM
- JVM provides the run time environment for the
bytecode (Java Runtime Environment JRE) - executes the bytecode and causes native machine
code instructions to execute on the CPU that the
JVM is on - ? each target platform needs an implementation of
the JVM
16Java Compiler
Errors
Byte Code
Compiler
Source Code
Interpreter for Computer A (JVM)
Interpreter for Computer B (JVM)
Interpreter for Computer C (JVM)
17Operation of the JRE (Java Runtime Environment)
Runtime
Compile
Class Loader
java
Bytecode verifier
Load from hard disk, network or other source
Interpreter
javac
RunTime
Hardware
18JRE
- At runtime the java bytecode that makes up a java
software program are - Loaded, checked and run in an interpreter
- In the case of applets you can download the
bytecode and they are then interpreted by the JVM
built into the browser. - Bytecode verifier checks
- Attributes correctly typed
- Body of the methods check
- Type checking
- References to other types checked
19Java Applications vs Java Applets
- There are two categories of Java Programs
- A Java Application
- These are stand alone programs in the traditional
sense - Run independently
- Run under the java interpreter
- Java applets
- These are programs designed to run from browsers
such as Netscape or Suns HotJava. - They dont run independently
- Programs that can be included in web documents.
20First Java Program (Application)
// First Program HelloWorld public class
HelloWorld public static void main(String args
) System.out.println(Hello
world...)
- A class definition is the basic block of a Java
program - Each program must have a main method to tell it
where to start executing
21Notes
- // First Program HelloWorld
- Comments begin with //
- Can also use C style comments
- / First Program HelloWorld /
22Notes 2
- public class HelloWorld
- This begins a class definition for class
HelloWorld - These classes are known as Programmer defined
classes or User defined classes - The public and class terms are java keywords
which are always lowercase - HelloWorld is the class identifier which always
start with an uppercase letter
23Notes 3
- When you save your class definition in a file the
filename must be the same as the class identifier
with a .java extension - So the HelloWorld class would be stored in a
HelloWorld.java file
24Notes 4
- public static void main(String args )
- Java applications automatically begin executing
at main - Parentheses () after main indicate a program
piece called a method which define some
operational component of the class. - Void indicates that the method will perform a
task without returning any information when it
completes - String args are used as input arguments to the
method. In this case we dont use input but java
requires it anyway
25Notes 5
- System.out.println(Hello world...)
- System.out is called the standard output object
- This will display a line of text in the command
window - In Java , any source and destination for I/O is
considered a stream of bytes or characters. - To perform output we insert bytes or characters
into a stream. To perform input we extract bytes
or characters from a stream. - java.lang.System class contains three predefined
streams - System.out
- System.err for errors
- System.in
26A First Java Program
- This is a Java application not a Java applet
indicated by presence of main - Source code exists in a file with same name as
the class and an extension of .java. So for the
previous example it is HelloWorld.java - Java is case sensitive (like C.)
27Using the JDK
- Create source files for each class in your
program - The name of source file should be the same as the
name of class
public class myCode
myCode.java
Source File
28Compiling your source code
- Compile each class source file into bytecode
(class files) - To compile a java source file
- javac myCode.java
- This creates a classfile called myCode.class
1001101001110101011
myCode.class
Class File
29To run your program
- To start your program running you run the
bytecode of the program control class - The program control class has the main method
- To run bytecode pass it to the JVM
- java classFileName
- e.g. java myProg
- note no .class included