interface as a method parameter in Java

Solution 1:

This is in fact one of the most common and useful ways to use an interface. The interface defines a contract, and your code can work with any class that implements the interface, without having to know the concrete class - it can even work with classes that didn't exist yet when the code was written.

There are many examples in the Java standard API, especially in the collections framework. For example, Collections.sort() can sort anything that implements the List interface (not just ArrayList or LinkedList, though implementing your own List is uncommon) and whose contents implement the Comparable interface (not just String or the numerical wrapper classes - and having your own class implement Comparable for that purpose is quite common).

Solution 2:

It's not the interface "object" being passed to the method, still just a regular object. It's just a way of saying "this parameter will accept any object that supports this interface". It's equivalent to accepting some object of a base class type, even if you're passing in a subclass.

Solution 3:

This is called programming to interfaces. You don't code to a specific implementation class of node lists but to the interface implemented by all those implementations.

That way your code will still work if someone writes a new and much better implementation of NodeList after you wrote your reverse method and you don't have to adapt your code for each new implementation of NodeList.

Solution 4:

The argument needs an object, which class implements an interface (the parameter).

In pseudo Java the code:

void reverse(NodeList node) {
    // your code
}

is equal to:

reverse(x) {
    if(x == null || x instanceof NodeList) {
         // your code
    }else throw new RuntimeException("Some sort of error.");
}

Note; read more on Interfaces here: http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/java/IandI/interfaceAsType.html

Solution 5:

Had this same confusion while learning lambda stuff. This video didnt explain the concept, but it's a clear way for you to see how it works in terms of passing an interface as a parameter.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mk3erzL70yM