Object Oriented Programming (OOP) - CS304 Power Point Slides Lecture 12
Object Oriented Programming (OOP) - CS304 Power Point Slides Lecture 12
12
Review
Constant
are shared by all instances of the class They do not belong to any particular instance of a class
Class Variable
s2(rollNo,)
Class Space
s3(rollNo,)
s1(rollNo,)
data members should be initialized once at file scope They are initialized at the time of definition
Example
class Student{ private: static int noOfStudents; public: }; int Student::noOfStudents = 0; /*private static member cannot be accessed outside the class except for initialization*/
static data members are not explicitly initialized at the time of definition then they are initialized to 0
Example
int Student::noOfStudents; is equivalent to int Student::noOfStudents=0;
Example
class Student{ public: static int noOfStudents; }; int Student::noOfStudents; int main(){ Student aStudent; aStudent.noOfStudents = 1; Student::noOfStudents = 1; }
are created even when there is no object of a class They remain in memory even when all objects of a class are destroyed
Example
class Student{ public: static int noOfStudents; }; int Student::noOfStudents; int main(){ Student::noOfStudents = 1; }
Example
class Student{ public: static int noOfStudents; }; int Student::noOfStudents; int main(){ { Student aStudent; aStudent.noOfStudents = 1; } Student::noOfStudents = 1; }
Uses
They
can be used to store information that is required by all objects, like global variables
Example
Modify
the class Student such that one can know the number of student created in a system
Example
class Student{ public: static int noOfStudents; Student(); ~Student(); }; int Student::noOfStudents = 0;
Example
Student::Student(){ noOfStudents++; } Student::~Student(){ noOfStudents--; }
Example
int Student::noOfStudents = 0; int main(){ cout <<Student::noOfStudents <<endl; Student studentA; cout <<Student::noOfStudents <<endl; Student studentB; cout <<Student::noOfStudents <<endl; }
Output: 0 1 2
Problem
noOfStudents
is accessible outside the class Bad design as the local data member is kept public
are used to access static data members Access mechanism for static member functions is same as that of static data members They cannot access any non-static members
Example
class Student{ static int noOfStudents; int rollNo; public: static int getTotalStudent(){ return noOfStudents; } }; int main(){ int i = Student::getTotalStudents(); }
return rollNo;
} int main(){
this Pointer
this
pointer is passed implicitly to member functions this pointer is not passed to static member functions Reason is static member functions cannot access non static data members
to static member is to use global variable Global variables are accessible to all entities of the program
Against information hiding
Array of Objects
Array
of objects can only be created if an object can be created without supplying an explicit initializer There must always be a default constructor if we want to create array of objects
Example
class Test{ public: }; int main(){ Test array[2]; // OK }
Example
class Test{ public: Test(); }; int main(){ Test array[2]; // OK }
Example
class Test{ public: Test(int i); }; int main(){ Test array[2]; // Error }
Example
class Test{ public: Test(int i); } int main(){ Test array[2] = {Test(0),Test(0)}; }
Example
class Test{ public: Test(int i); } int main(){ Test a(1),b(2); Test array[2] = {a,b}; }