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runtime(doc): Update the 'specifies' keyword documentation, slightly reformat

closes: #16648

Signed-off-by: Yegappan Lakshmanan <yegappan@yahoo.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
This commit is contained in:
Yegappan Lakshmanan
2025-02-16 16:15:50 +01:00
committed by Christian Brabandt
parent c0f0e2380e
commit 44831e4bea

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
*vim9class.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Feb 11
*vim9class.txt* For Vim version 9.1. Last change: 2025 Feb 16
VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
@@ -52,7 +52,6 @@ An interface is used to specify properties of an object:
The class hierarchy allows for single inheritance. Otherwise interfaces are
to be used where needed.
Class modeling ~
You can model classes any way you like. Keep in mind what you are building,
@@ -122,7 +121,6 @@ using the object name followed by a dot following by the member: >
A class name cannot be used as an expression. A class name cannot be used in
the left-hand-side of an assignment.
Object variable write access ~
*read-only-variable*
Now try to change an object variable directly: >
@@ -626,13 +624,15 @@ once. They can appear in any order, although this order is recommended: >
extends ClassName
implements InterfaceName, OtherInterface
specifies SomeInterface
< *E1355* *E1369*
<
The "specifies" feature is currently not implemented.
*E1355* *E1369*
Each variable and method name can be used only once. It is not possible to
define a method with the same name and different type of arguments. It is not
possible to use a public and protected member variable with the same name. An
object variable name used in a super class cannot be reused in a child class.
Object Variable Initialization ~
If the type of a variable is not explicitly specified in a class, then it is
@@ -689,13 +689,12 @@ A class can implement one or more interfaces. The "implements" keyword can
only appear once *E1350* . Multiple interfaces can be specified, separated by
commas. Each interface name can appear only once. *E1351*
A class defining an interface ~
*specifies*
A class can declare its interface, the object variables and methods, with a
named interface. This avoids the need for separately specifying the
interface, which is often done in many languages, especially Java.
TODO: This is currently not implemented.
Items in a class ~
*E1318* *E1325* *E1388*
@@ -786,7 +785,6 @@ An interface can only be defined in a |Vim9| script file. *E1342*
An interface cannot "implement" another interface but it can "extend" another
interface. *E1381*
null object ~
When a variable is declared to have the type of an object, but it is not
@@ -795,7 +793,6 @@ does not know what class was supposed to be used. Vim then cannot check if
a variable name is correct and you will get a "Using a null object" error,
even when the variable name is invalid. *E1360* *E1362*
Default constructor ~
*default-constructor*
In case you define a class without a new() method, one will be automatically
@@ -1118,7 +1115,6 @@ For |Vim9| script using the same method name for all constructors seemed like
the right choice, and by calling it new() the relation between the caller and
the method being called is obvious.
No overloading of the constructor ~
In Vim script, both legacy and |Vim9| script, there is no overloading of
@@ -1139,7 +1135,6 @@ That way multiple constructors with different arguments are possible, while it
is very easy to see which constructor is being used. And the type of
arguments can be properly checked.
No overloading of methods ~
Same reasoning as for the constructor: It is often not obvious what type
@@ -1148,7 +1143,6 @@ actually being called. Better just give the methods a different name, then
type checking will make sure it works as you intended. This rules out
polymorphism, which we don't really need anyway.
Single inheritance and interfaces ~
Some languages support multiple inheritance. Although that can be useful in
@@ -1164,7 +1158,6 @@ it will be checked if that change was also changed. The mechanism to assume a
class implements an interface just because the methods happen to match is
brittle and leads to obscure problems, let's not do that.
Using "this.variable" everywhere ~
The object variables in various programming languages can often be accessed in
@@ -1183,7 +1176,6 @@ variables. Simple and consistent. When looking at the code inside a class
it's also directly clear which variable references are object variables and
which aren't.
Using class variables ~
Using "static variable" to declare a class variable is very common, nothing
@@ -1197,7 +1189,6 @@ the class. This has two problems: The class name can be rather long, taking
up quite a bit of space, and when the class is renamed all these places need
to be changed too.
Declaring object and class variables ~
The main choice is whether to use "var" as with variable declarations.
@@ -1251,7 +1242,6 @@ function declaration syntax for class/object variables and methods. Vim9 also
reuses the general function declaration syntax for methods. So, for the sake
of consistency, we require "var" in these declarations.
Using "ClassName.new()" to construct an object ~
Many languages use the "new" operator to create an object, which is actually
@@ -1315,7 +1305,6 @@ An alternative would have been using the "protected" keyword, just like
"public" changes the access in the other direction. Well, that's just to
reduce the number of keywords.
No private object variables ~
Some languages provide several ways to control access to object variables.