Replication
Revision as of 10:28, 25 August 2006 by Konradm (Talk | contribs) (→Basic cases of direct repeated inheritance)
Work in progress!
We start with some very basic examples, for this we consider all the classes not to be inherited by ANY.
Example set
Basic cases of direct repeated inheritance
The following set of example will base on class B:
class B feature f: INTEGER g do f := f + 1 end end
Three cases of non-conforming repeated inheritance
Lets have look at D1 that repeatedly inherits from B:
class D1 inherit {NONE} B rename f as f_1, g as g_1 end B rename f as f_2, g as g_2 end feature end
And an informal description of the semantics: An object of class D1 contains two physical attributes (f_1 and f_2). A call to feature g_1 results in f_1 being incremented and a call to g_2 increments f_2.
Lets do the same for D2:
class D2 inherit {NONE} B rename g as g_1 end B rename g as g_2 end feature end
An object of class D2 contains one physical attribute (f). A call to either g_1 or g_2 results in f being incremented.
Class D3 should be rejected by the compiler:
class D3 inherit {NONE} B rename f as f_1 end B rename f as f_2 end feature end
Since an object of class D3 would have two physical attributes f_1 and f_2, it is not clear which one g should increment.