As since in a class I can do:
public final class Foo{}
wich means no more classes can extends that Foo class... e.g. String class is final, so no custom class can extends the class String.
How can I prevent to do the same with an interface?
If I do
public interface ISome{
void fly();
}
I would like to allow that
class A implements ISome {}
but block that
public interface IHouse extends ISome{
void fly();
}
doing this
public final interface ISome{}
makes no sense... and will bring a compile error like:
Illegal modifier for the interface
You can't.
Supposedly the Java designers didn't think there would ever be an appropriate use case for this: if you don't want an interface to be extended then really you ought to declare those functions directly in a concrete class.
That said, you can achieve this in C++ as in this language an interface is more of a convention - consisting of only pure virtual functions, and you can enforce non-extensibility with techniques such as friendship.
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