Packages
Packages
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Although classes are the central unit of object-oriented design in Java,
packages provide an additional level of organizational support. Packages
are used to store sets or related classes and interfaces. (packages usually
correspond to a directory in which you store your class files). As such,
packages define relationships between classes and how they should work
together. They also protect the name space since they provide the JVM another
way to identify classes by name. Thus, you may have two classes of the
same name so long as they reside in separate packages.
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You can specifically define a package name using the "package" keyword
on the first line of a class such as in:
package myPakage;
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Another benefit of using packages is it allows you to reference entire
packages of classes using the "import" keyword. Thus, rather than specifying
a class absolutely, you can import its package and reference it relative
to its package. Thus, you often see the line:
import java.awt.*;
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In this case, you can use any class in the awt package using only its name.
Consider the following code:
import java.applet.*;
public class myApplet extends Applet
{
.. code...
}
Without the import, you would need to write the following:
public class myApplet extends java.applet.Applet
{
.. code...
}
Note that you get all the classes in java.lang for
free since it is loaded automatically by the JVM |
Relationships between classes are also handled by modifiers or access specifiers.
We'll talk about this in just a minute.
Additional Resources:
Ineheritance
Table of Contents
Creating
and Using Classes by Example
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