Bicycle
class uses the following lines of code to define its fields:
public int cadence; public int gear; public int speed;
public
or private
.
Bicycle
are named cadence
, gear
, and speed
and
are all of data type integer (int
). The public
keyword identifies these fields as public members, accessible by
any object that can access the class.
public
and private
. Other access modifiers will be discussed later.
public
modifier—the field is accessible from all classes.
private
modifier—the field is accessible only within its own class.
In the spirit of encapsulation, it is common to make fields private. This means that they can only be directly accessed from the Bicycle class. We still need access to these values, however. This can be done indirectly by adding public methods that obtain the field values for us:
public class Bicycle { private int cadence; private int gear; private int speed; public Bicycle(int startCadence, int startSpeed, int startGear) { gear = startGear; cadence = startCadence; speed = startSpeed; } public int getCadence() { return cadence; } public void setCadence(int newValue) { cadence = newValue; } public int getGear() { return gear; } public void setGear(int newValue) { gear = newValue; } public int getSpeed() { return speed; } public void applyBrake(int decrement) { speed -= decrement; } public void speedUp(int increment) { speed += increment; } }
int
,
float
, boolean
, etc. Or you can use
reference types, such as strings, arrays, or objects.
In this lesson, be aware that the same naming rules and conventions are used for method and class names, except that