Application Development and Automation Discussions
Join the discussions or start your own on all things application development, including tools and APIs, programming models, and keeping your skills sharp.
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Read only

interfaces

Former Member
0 Likes
350

can you please explain in brief what exactly are interfaces in abap objects??

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
Read only

Former Member
0 Likes
326

Interfaces

Classes, their instances (objects), and access to objects using reference variables form the basics of ABAP Objects. These means already allow you to model typical business applications, such as customers, orders, order items, invoices, and so on, using objects, and to implement solutions using ABAP Objects.

However, it is often necessary for similar classes to provide similar functions that are coded differently in each class but which should provide a uniform point of contact for the user. For example, you might have two similar classes, savings account and check account, both of which have a method for calculating end of year charges. The interfaces and names of the methods are the same, but the actual implementation is different. The user of the classes and their instances must also be able to run the end of year method for all accounts, without having to worry about the actual type of each individual account.

ABAP Objects makes this possible by using interfaces. Interfaces are independent structures that you can implement in a class to extend the scope of that class. The class-specific scope of a class is defined by its components and visibility sections. The public components of a class define its public scope, since all of its attributes and method parameters can be addressed by all users.

Interfaces extend the scope of a class by adding their own components to its public section. This allows users to address different classes across different inheritance trees via a universal point of contact. Interface references allow users to address and use different classes in exactly the same way. Interfaces, along with inheritance, provide one of the pillars of polymorphism, since they allow a single method within an interface to behave differently in different classes.

Defining Interfaces

Like classes, you can define interfaces either globally in the Repository or locally in an ABAP program. For information about how to define local interfaces, refer to the Class Builder section of the ABAP Workbench Tools documentation. The definition of a local interface intf is enclosed in the statements:

INTERFACE intf.

...

ENDINTERFACE.

The definition contains the declaration for all components (attributes, methods, events) of the interface. You can define the same components in an interface as in a class. The components of interfaces do not have to be assigned individually to a visibility section, since they automatically belong to the public section of the class in which the interface is implemented. Interfaces do not have an implementation part, since their methods are implemented in the class that implements the interface.

<removed_by_moderator>

regards

preet

Edited by: Julius Bussche on Aug 26, 2008 12:06 PM

1 REPLY 1
Read only

Former Member
0 Likes
327

Interfaces

Classes, their instances (objects), and access to objects using reference variables form the basics of ABAP Objects. These means already allow you to model typical business applications, such as customers, orders, order items, invoices, and so on, using objects, and to implement solutions using ABAP Objects.

However, it is often necessary for similar classes to provide similar functions that are coded differently in each class but which should provide a uniform point of contact for the user. For example, you might have two similar classes, savings account and check account, both of which have a method for calculating end of year charges. The interfaces and names of the methods are the same, but the actual implementation is different. The user of the classes and their instances must also be able to run the end of year method for all accounts, without having to worry about the actual type of each individual account.

ABAP Objects makes this possible by using interfaces. Interfaces are independent structures that you can implement in a class to extend the scope of that class. The class-specific scope of a class is defined by its components and visibility sections. The public components of a class define its public scope, since all of its attributes and method parameters can be addressed by all users.

Interfaces extend the scope of a class by adding their own components to its public section. This allows users to address different classes across different inheritance trees via a universal point of contact. Interface references allow users to address and use different classes in exactly the same way. Interfaces, along with inheritance, provide one of the pillars of polymorphism, since they allow a single method within an interface to behave differently in different classes.

Defining Interfaces

Like classes, you can define interfaces either globally in the Repository or locally in an ABAP program. For information about how to define local interfaces, refer to the Class Builder section of the ABAP Workbench Tools documentation. The definition of a local interface intf is enclosed in the statements:

INTERFACE intf.

...

ENDINTERFACE.

The definition contains the declaration for all components (attributes, methods, events) of the interface. You can define the same components in an interface as in a class. The components of interfaces do not have to be assigned individually to a visibility section, since they automatically belong to the public section of the class in which the interface is implemented. Interfaces do not have an implementation part, since their methods are implemented in the class that implements the interface.

<removed_by_moderator>

regards

preet

Edited by: Julius Bussche on Aug 26, 2008 12:06 PM