Using superclass "protected final" methods to keep common code for subclasses

If you're a Java beginner, or you are thinking about these sorts of things, then now is a good time to read the "Classes and Interfaces" chapter in a book called "Effective Java." The information there will be more thorough and nuanced than answers that you get here.

Here's one way to think about mixing the final, protected, and static keywords:

  • OO purists will advise you to avoid static because it breaks the OO paradigm.
  • Of course, using the final keyword prevents subclasses from overriding a method as well. In this respect, the outcome is the same as with static.
  • final should be used more often, and it's a good idea to use it along with protected. See Item 17 in "Effective Java".
  • protected and static are not used together very often. You'd be mixing an OO construct with a construct that breaks normal OO behavior, so the combination is odd.

It seems reasonable to me - although you might want to make A abstract as well. Also consider using composition instead - could B and C contain an A instead of subclassing it?


Firstly, you shouldn't use extends to this purpose because too much extending are always bad idea.

Secondly, You're completely right that you don't repeat your code, but grouping it by repeated part of code isn't good choice. Preferable way is to grouping things be meaning in real world, by level of abstraction.

Last but not least, When you have doubts: separately or not, extending or composition, protected final or only protected, try write unit test to this class and answers will come very fast.