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It's the start of another week, and we need some guys naked and hard to kick things off the right way Enjoy these tempting men and dicks! Free daily photos of male models, shirtless hunks, nude men, naked guys, gay selfies, and the occasional porn star! Super() is a special use of the super keyword where you call a parameterless parent constructor In general, the super keyword can be used to call overridden methods, access hidden fields or invoke a superclass's constructor. In fact, multiple inheritance is the only case where super() is of any use
I would not recommend using it with classes using linear inheritance, where it's just useless overhead. As for chaining super::super, as i mentionned in the question, i have still to find an interesting use to that For now, i only see it as a hack, but it was worth mentioning, if only for the differences with java (where you can't chain super). Super e>) says that it's some type which is an ancestor (superclass) of e Extends e>) says that it's some type which is a subclass of e (in both cases e itself is okay.) so the constructor uses the
I'm currently learning about class inheritance in my java course and i don't understand when to use the super() call I found this example of code where super.variable is used How to call super constructor in lombok asked 10 years, 6 months ago modified 1 year, 4 months ago viewed 343k times How do i call the parent function from a derived class using c++ For example, i have a class called parent, and a class called child which is derived from parent Within each class there is a print
Can't be called from main method I wrote the following code When i try to run it as at the end of the file i get this stacktrace 'super' object has no attribute do_something class parent
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