dennis petrocelli a écrit :
Greetings smalltalkers,
I'm a newbie trying to get my head around inheritance. I'm puzzled by the following example. It seems to do what I mean, but not what I type ;) This is a good thing, but I'd get further if I understood the semantics a bit better.
from http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/wolfgang.kreutzer/cosc205/smalltalk1.html
Class: Monster Superclass: Object Category: Sesame Street Instance variables: colour tummy
initialization
initialize self colour: #green. self tummy: Bag new
"There is only a single class method and no class variables."
creation new ^ super new initialize
What I don't understand is this: Monster new returns an instance of Monster, what you'd want it to. But Monster new executes "^ super new" which to my mind should return an instance of Object, not Monster. Just to confuse myself further, I typed:
Monster superclass new
and got an Object. It seems to me that "super new" and "superclass new" should do the same thing.
Any points to clarify my confusion would be greatly appreciated.
This is beceause (super = self) it's only in term of lookup that super is different. super and self represent the receiver. so 'super new' call new from Object but with the knowlege that he have to build a Monster object.
#superclass is an method and weusally writ it with a '#' in front of it. so you can't compare super and a method (super is an object, super = self). So #superclass give you the object supercass of your Monster (ie Object)
Thanks, Dennis Petrocelli