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This is part 6 of the Java programming series. Earlier parts: Part 2.

Object-Oriented Programming in Java

Java is fundamentally an object-oriented language. The four pillars of OOP are:

1. Encapsulation

Encapsulation means bundling data (fields) and the methods that operate on that data within a single class, and restricting direct access to some of the object's components. In Java, this is done using access modifiers (private, public, protected).

2. Inheritance

Inheritance allows a new class to reuse the properties and methods of an existing class. In Java, the extends keyword is used:

class Animal {
    void eat() { System.out.println("Eating..."); }
}
class Dog extends Animal {
    void bark() { System.out.println("Barking..."); }
}

3. Polymorphism

Polymorphism allows objects to be treated as instances of their parent class. Method overriding and method overloading are two forms of polymorphism in Java.

4. Abstraction

Abstraction hides implementation details and shows only essential features. In Java, this is achieved using abstract classes and interfaces.

OOP concepts are frequently tested in both A/Level ICT and SLAS exams. Make sure you can explain all four pillars with examples.

See also: Wrapper Classes | Java Data Types