Why doesn’t Java allow you to create instances of inner classes?
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Java
See English answers > 25 Java inner classes and static nested classes
public class m { String n="n"; static String s="s"; public class sub1 { public void fn(){System.out.println(n);} //static public void fs(){System.out.println(s);} } static class sub2 { //public void fn(){System.out.println(n);} static public void fs(){System.out.println(s);} } public void f() { sub1 s1=new sub1();//OK,no error sub2 s2=new sub2();//OK } public static void main(String[] args) { m obj=new m(); sub1 s1=new sub1();//Error s1.fn(); //s1.fs(); sub2 s2=new sub2();//OK //s2.fn(); s2.fs(); } }
I use openjdk to compile it under Linux, and it reports errors
$java -version openjdk version "1.8.0_91" OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_91-8u91-b14-3ubuntu1~16.04.1-b14) OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.91-b14,mixed mode) $javac m.java m.java:24: Error: Cannot reference non-static variable this in a static context. sub1 s1=new sub1();//Error ^ 1 Errors
This is strange to me: 1 In the m.f() member function, we can "sub1 S1 = new sub1();", But in main, we can't 2 Can static class sub2 have instances instead of static sub1?
Is this a java design? Why?
Solution
>A non - static inner class is treated as a member of an outer class
So you have to do something like this,
OuterClass outer = new OuterClass(); InnerClass inner = outer.new InnerClass();
So, in your case,
m obj = new m(); sub1 s1 = obj.new Sub1();
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