Errata 6
From APIDesign
The chapter 6 discusses protected abstract methods and says that removing such method is source compatible (page 89). In fact that was true until Java 5 appeared. However the newly introduced @Override annotation changed everything.
Code from Anagrams.java:
See the whole file.public abstract class Anagrams extends javax.swing.JFrame implements UI { protected abstract WordLibrary getWordLibrary(); protected abstract Scrambler getScrambler(); public void display() { initWord(); setVisible(true); } }
If you create a new version of public abstract class Anagrams dropping either getWordLibrary or getScrambler (or both), the @Override annotation in AnagramsWithConstructor will cause the compiler to complain:
Code from AnagramsWithConstructor.java:
See the whole file.public class AnagramsWithConstructor extends Anagrams { private final WordLibrary library; private final Scrambler scrambler; public AnagramsWithConstructor( WordLibrary library, Scrambler scrambler ) { this.library = library; this.scrambler = scrambler; } @Override protected WordLibrary getWordLibrary() { return library; } @Override protected Scrambler getScrambler() { return scrambler; } }
Source compatibility is gone. As an API designer of public class Anagrams you don't know whether your users (writing class AnagramsWithConstructor) will use @Override. As a result don't even try to remove protected abstract methods from an API. It was never good idea anyway and since Java 5 it is not backward compatible.
-- Rijk van Haaften, Oct 8, 2010