问题
I was reading through the Map.Entry interface, when I noticed it is a 'static' interface. I didn't quite understand what a static interface is, and how is it different from a regular interface ?
public static interface Map.Entry<K,V>
This is the definition of the interface. Docs here: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/Map.Entry.html
回答1:
I'm curious about the case when it's not an inner interface.
The static
modifier is only allowed on a nested classes or interfaces. In your example Entry
is nested inside the Map
interface.
For interfaces, the static
modifier is actually optional. The distinction makes no sense for interfaces since they contain no code that could access the outer this
anyway.
回答2:
Static inner interface and inner interface is the same, all access rules are the same as with inner static class. So inner interface can be accessible only if you have access to its parent class/interface. In case below you will have access to interface B only from package of interface A, because A has default access modifier. BTW: interface B could be static or not.
interface A {
void testA();
public interface B {
void testB();
}
}
回答3:
Finally, even Android Studio indicates that using static with inner interface is not needed:
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/62779626/useless-static-keyword-in-enclosed-interface