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ECOOP
2000
Springer

On Inner Classes

13 years 9 months ago
On Inner Classes
Inner classes in object-oriented languages play a role similar to nested function definitions in functional languages, allowing an object to export other objects with direct access to its own methods and instance variables. However, the similarity is deceptive: a close look at inner classes reveals significant subtleties arising from their interactions with inheritance. The goal of this work is a precise understanding of the essential features of inner classes; our object of study is a fragment of Java with inner classes and inheritance (and almost nothing else). We begin by giving a direct reduction semantics for this language. We then give an alternative semantics by translation into a yet smaller language with only top-level classes, closely following Java’s Inner Classes Specification. We prove that the two semantics coincide, in the sense that translation commutes with reduction, and that both are type-safe.
Atsushi Igarashi, Benjamin C. Pierce
Added 02 Aug 2010
Updated 02 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2000
Where ECOOP
Authors Atsushi Igarashi, Benjamin C. Pierce
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