Here is the code.
public class Test {
class InnerClass{
}
public static void main(String[] args){
InnerClass ic
InnerClass
needs to be static
itself, i.e.
public class Test {
static class InnerClass{
}
public static void main(String[] args){
InnerClass ic = new InnerClass();
}
}
If InnerClass
is not static
, it can only be instantiated in the context of a parent instance of Test
. The rather baroque syntax for this is:
public class Test {
class InnerClass{
}
public static void main(String[] args){
Test test = new Test();
InnerClass ic = test.new InnerClass();
}
}
First, a "nested" class is static, and an "inner" class is not.
A static class is shared between all instances of the enclosing class (thus static fields are shared between all instances), while each instance has its own version of a non-static inner class.
Non-static inner classes are stored with the enclosing object (rather than class) and can only be accessed via an instance.
Your inner class depends on an instance of the Test
class. main is a static method, thus you can't create an instance of InnerClass
.
I think you want to declare your inner class as static
:
class Test {
static class InnerClass { }
public static void main(String[] args){
InnerClass ic = new InnerClass();
}
}
More information about nested classes : http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/nested.html
There's mainly two types of nested classes : "static nested class" and "inner class"
Static nested class are used to logically group two classes and can be used to increase encapsulation. They can be used like any other classes and, except for visibility, they don't have any particular access to the outer class fields. They can logically be instantiated in a static context.
Inner class (ie not static) are bound to a particular instance of the outer class. This means you must have an instance of the outer class to instantiate the inner class. Have a look at Skaffman second code chunk for an instantiation example. Since inner classes are bound to an instance of the outer class, they have access to every field relative to this particular instance.
I hope all this is now clearer.