Anonymous Classes in Java

A type of inner class that has no name that you define right in the middle of a method (where static init blocks and instance init blocks count as methods). You define it, and create an object of that type as a parameter all in one line. An anonymous class is defined and instantiated in a single succinct expression using the new operator.Used for creating simple delegate callback objects.These anonymous inner classes can access the static and instance variables of the enclosing outer class.
Instead of passing arguments to a constructor, your inner class methods can reach out and grab what they need directly from local variables in the enclosing method. The other technique is to use an instance initialiser block. You are only allowed one per anonymous inner class.
Syntax for Anonymous Classes
new class-name ( [ argument-list ] ) { class-body }

package Vinay; 
public class VinayMain
{ 
public static void main(String[] args) 
{ 
// Here is where the anonymous class is defined and instantiated // 
Runnable vinayrun = new Runnable() 
{
int Total = 0; 
public void run() 
{ 
for (int i=0; i<10000000; i++) 
{
Total++;
} 
System.out.println(Integer.toString(Total)); 
 } 
 }; 
vinayrun.run(); 
} 
 }

create an instance, named vinayrun , of a nameless (anonymous) class which implements the java.lang.Runnable interface.And we are calling the run mehtod of anonymous class through vinayrun object.

Drawback– The big drawback with anonymous classes is they can’t have explicit constructors. You can’t pass them any parameters when they are instantiated.

Benefits of Anonymous Classes
The key benefit of an anonymous class is encapsulation (or clutter reduction). An anonymous class is, in a sense, the ultimate in private object oriented encapsulation. It is defined exactly where it is needed, it can never be used anywhere else, and it has totally local scope.One final key benefit of anonymous classes is that they have access to all data and methods of their containing classes, including private members; meaning that for small highly localized tasks, they may require less initialization.

References –
http://ssmela.googlepages.com/AnonymousClassesinJava.pdf
http://mindprod.com/jgloss/anonymousclasses.html

Using JavaMail API to send an email in JAVA

We can send mail through JavaMail Api through java code.I have read somewhere and thought of sharing with everyone.
For using this code you need to JavaMail Api.

//get mail session

Properties props = new Properties();
props.put("mail.smtp.host","localhost");
Session session = session.getDefaultInstance(props);

// create the messge.
MimeMessage message = new MimeMessage(session);
message.setSubject("Vinay first Mail");
Message.setText("Vinay mail text ");

//address the message
InternetAddress addfrm = new InternetAddress("[email protected]");
message.setFrom(addfrm);
InternetAddress addto = new InternetAddress("[email protected]");
message.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO,addto);

//send message
Transport.send(message);

Update

Send email in text and html format Text and HTML format

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Interface vs Abstract Class

Abstract classes
Abstract class is class which contain one or more abstract methods, which is implemented by sub classes. An abstract class can contain no abstract methods but also containe mehtod with body. Abstract classes are useful in a situation when some general methods should be implemented and specialization behavior should be implemented by subclasses.Abstract class can contain private as well as protected members.
When to use Abstract Class-If we have a base class where all the classes will perform the same function, then we can define that in our Abstract class. If you plan on updating this base class throughout the life of your program, it is best to allow that base class to be an abstract class. Because you can make a change to it and all of the inheriting classes will now have this new functionality.

Interface
Interface is extremely useful when you don’t want a big hierarchical type framework. As interfaces are implicitly abstract, they cannot be directly instantiated except when instantiated by a class which implements the said interface. The class must implement all of the methods described in the interface, or be an abstract class. An Interface can only have public members. A class implementing an interface must implement all of the methods defined in the interface, while a class extending an abstract class need not implement any of the methods defined in the abstract class.Maintainability–if you want to add a new feature (method) in its contract, then you must implement those method in all of the classes which implement that interface. However, in the case of an abstract class, the method can be simply implemented in the abstract class and the same can be called by its subclass.

When To use interface – Interfaces are useful when you do not want classes to inherit from unrelated classes just to get the required functionality.It is used where there of chances adding new method in future. Interfaces are more used to set standards. interface gave merely a specification,nothing implemented for any standalone project which can be changed at will its more design flexible and it can be utilized to model multiple inheritance.

Ref – http://www.interview-questions-java.com/java-questions/java-abstract-class-and-interface-interview-questions

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