Identifiers :
- Identifiers can begin with a letter, an underscore, or a currency character.
- After the first character, identifiers can also include digits.
- Identifiers can be of any length.
- JavaBeans methods must be named using camelCase, and depending on the method's purpose, must start with set, get, is, add, or remove.
- A source code file can have only one public class.
- If the source file contains a public class, the filename must match the public class name.
- A file can have only one package statement, but multiple imports.
- The package statement (if any) must be the first (non-comment) line in a source file.
- The import statements (if any) must come after the package and before the class declaration.
- package and import statements apply to all classes in the file.
- A file can have more than one nonpublic class.
- Files with no public classes have no naming restrictions.
- There are three access modifiers: public, protected, and private.
- There are four access levels: public, protected, default, and private.
- Classes can have only public or default access.
- A class with default access can be seen only by classes within the same package.
- A class with public access can be seen by all classes from all packages.
- Class visibility revolves around whether code in one class can create an instance of another class, extend (or subclass), another class and access methods and variables of another class.
- Classes can also be modified with final, abstract, or strictfp.
- A class cannot be both final and abstract.
- A final class cannot be subclassed.
- An abstract class cannot be instantiated.
- A single abstract method in a class means the whole class must be abstract.
- The first concrete class to extend an abstract class must implement all of its abstract methods.
- Interfaces are contracts for what a class can do, but they say nothing about the way in which the class must do it.
- An interface can have only public and abstract methods, no concrete methods allowed.
- Interfaces can have constants, which are always implicitly public, static, and final.
- Interfaces can only extend one or more other interfaces.
- Members can use all four access levels: public, protected, default, private.
- public members can be accessed by all other classes, even in other packages.
- private members can be accessed only by code in the same class.
- Default members can be accessed only by classes in the same package.
- protected members can be accessed by other classes in the same package, plus subclasses regardless of package.
- A protected member inherited by a subclass from another package is not accessible to any other class in the subclass package, except for the subclass' own subclasses.
1 comment:
A source code file can have only one public class.
can you tell me why this rule is created ? any specific reasons
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