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Implement Inheritance Heirarchy
Implement a Shape abstract class which will form the base of an inheritance hierarchy that models 2D geometric shapes. It will have:
* A non-mutable
* A
* A
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* A non-mutable
'name' property or data member set by derived or descendant classes at construction time
* A
'area' method intended to be overridden by derived or descendant classes ( double precision floating point return value)
* A
'print' method (also for overriding) will display the shape's name, area, and all shape-specific values
Two derived or descendant classes will be created:
* Circle -> Constructor requires a 'radius' argument, and a 'circumference' method to be implemented
* Rectangle -> Constructor requires 'length' and 'breadth' arguments, and a 'perimeter' method to be implemented
Instantiate an object of each class, and invoke each objects 'print' method to show relevant details.
ruby
class Shape
def initialize(name="") @name = name end
end
class Circle < Shape
def initialize(radius) super("circle") ; @radius = radius end
def area() 3.14159 * @radius * @radius end
def circumference() 2 * 3.14159 * @radius end
def print()
puts "I am a #{@name} with ->"
puts "Radius: %.2f" % @radius
puts "Area: %.2f" % self.area()
puts "Circumference: %.2f\n" % self.circumference()
end
end
class Rectangle < Shape
def initialize(length, breadth) super("rectangle") ; @length = length ; @breadth = breadth end
def area() @length * @breadth end
def perimeter() 2 * @length + 2 * @breadth end
def print()
puts "I am a #{@name} with ->"
printf("Length, Width: %.2f, %.2f\n", @length, @breadth)
puts "Area: %.2f" % self.area()
puts "Perimeter: %.2f\n" % self.perimeter()
end
end
# ------
shapes = [Circle.new(4.2), Rectangle.new(2.7, 3.1), Rectangle.new(6.2, 2.6), Circle.new(17.3)]
shapes.each {|shape| shape.print}
def initialize(name="") @name = name end
end
class Circle < Shape
def initialize(radius) super("circle") ; @radius = radius end
def area() 3.14159 * @radius * @radius end
def circumference() 2 * 3.14159 * @radius end
def print()
puts "I am a #{@name} with ->"
puts "Radius: %.2f" % @radius
puts "Area: %.2f" % self.area()
puts "Circumference: %.2f\n" % self.circumference()
end
end
class Rectangle < Shape
def initialize(length, breadth) super("rectangle") ; @length = length ; @breadth = breadth end
def area() @length * @breadth end
def perimeter() 2 * @length + 2 * @breadth end
def print()
puts "I am a #{@name} with ->"
printf("Length, Width: %.2f, %.2f\n", @length, @breadth)
puts "Area: %.2f" % self.area()
puts "Perimeter: %.2f\n" % self.perimeter()
end
end
# ------
shapes = [Circle.new(4.2), Rectangle.new(2.7, 3.1), Rectangle.new(6.2, 2.6), Circle.new(17.3)]
shapes.each {|shape| shape.print}
csharp
// While abstract classes do exist in C#, it is most common to use
// an interface in this type of situation.
// It is a common idiom to prefix interface names with an I
public interface IShape {
string Name { get; }
double Area { get; }
void Print();
}
public class Circle : IShape {
private double Radius { get; set; }
public Circle(double radius) {
Name = "Circle";
Radius = radius;
}
public string Name { get; private set; }
public double Area {
get {
return Math.PI * Radius * Radius;
}
}
public double Circumference {
get {
return Math.PI * (Radius + Radius);
}
}
public void Print() {
Console.WriteLine( " Name: {0}\n Area: {1}\n Circumference: {2}\n Radius: {3}",
this.Name,
this.Area,
this.Circumference,
this.Radius
);
}
}
public class Rectangle : IShape {
private double Length { get; set; }
private double Breadth { get; set; }
public Rectangle(double length, double breadth) {
Name = "Rectangle";
Length = length;
Breadth = breadth;
}
public string Name { get; private set; }
public double Area {
get {
return Length * Breadth;
}
}
public double Perimeter {
get {
return (Length * 2) + (Breadth * 2 );
}
}
public void Print() {
Console.WriteLine( " Name: {0}\n Area: {1}\n Perimeter: {2}\n Length: {3}\n Breadth: {4}",
this.Name,
this.Area,
this.Perimeter,
this.Length,
this.Breadth
);
}
}
// Driver
public class InheritanceHeirarchy {
public static void _Main() {
var c = new Circle(2.1);
c.Print();
Console.WriteLine();
var r = new Rectangle(2.2, 3.3);
r.Print();
}
}
// an interface in this type of situation.
// It is a common idiom to prefix interface names with an I
public interface IShape {
string Name { get; }
double Area { get; }
void Print();
}
public class Circle : IShape {
private double Radius { get; set; }
public Circle(double radius) {
Name = "Circle";
Radius = radius;
}
public string Name { get; private set; }
public double Area {
get {
return Math.PI * Radius * Radius;
}
}
public double Circumference {
get {
return Math.PI * (Radius + Radius);
}
}
public void Print() {
Console.WriteLine( " Name: {0}\n Area: {1}\n Circumference: {2}\n Radius: {3}",
this.Name,
this.Area,
this.Circumference,
this.Radius
);
}
}
public class Rectangle : IShape {
private double Length { get; set; }
private double Breadth { get; set; }
public Rectangle(double length, double breadth) {
Name = "Rectangle";
Length = length;
Breadth = breadth;
}
public string Name { get; private set; }
public double Area {
get {
return Length * Breadth;
}
}
public double Perimeter {
get {
return (Length * 2) + (Breadth * 2 );
}
}
public void Print() {
Console.WriteLine( " Name: {0}\n Area: {1}\n Perimeter: {2}\n Length: {3}\n Breadth: {4}",
this.Name,
this.Area,
this.Perimeter,
this.Length,
this.Breadth
);
}
}
// Driver
public class InheritanceHeirarchy {
public static void _Main() {
var c = new Circle(2.1);
c.Print();
Console.WriteLine();
var r = new Rectangle(2.2, 3.3);
r.Print();
}
}
fsharp
[<AbstractClass>]
type Shape(name:string) =
member this.Name = name
abstract Area : float
abstract Print : unit -> unit
type Circle(name, radius:float) =
inherit Shape(name)
member this.Radius = radius
member this.Circumference =
System.Math.PI * radius * 2.
override this.Area =
System.Math.PI * radius * radius
override this.Print() =
printfn "Circle: %s" this.Name
printfn "Area: %f" this.Area
printfn "Circumference: %f" this.Circumference
printfn "Radius: %f" this.Radius
type Rectangle(name, length:float, breadth:float) =
inherit Shape(name)
member this.Length = length
member this.Breadth = breadth
member this.Perimiter =
(length * 2.) + (breadth * 2.)
override this.Area =
length * breadth
override this.Print() =
printfn "Rectangle: %s" this.Name
printfn "Area: %f" this.Area
printfn "Perimiter: %f" this.Perimiter
printfn "Length: %f" this.Length
printfn "Breadth: %f" this.Breadth
let c = Circle("Foo", 2.1)
let r = Rectangle("Bar", 2.2, 3.3)
c.Print()
printfn ""
r.Print()
type Shape(name:string) =
member this.Name = name
abstract Area : float
abstract Print : unit -> unit
type Circle(name, radius:float) =
inherit Shape(name)
member this.Radius = radius
member this.Circumference =
System.Math.PI * radius * 2.
override this.Area =
System.Math.PI * radius * radius
override this.Print() =
printfn "Circle: %s" this.Name
printfn "Area: %f" this.Area
printfn "Circumference: %f" this.Circumference
printfn "Radius: %f" this.Radius
type Rectangle(name, length:float, breadth:float) =
inherit Shape(name)
member this.Length = length
member this.Breadth = breadth
member this.Perimiter =
(length * 2.) + (breadth * 2.)
override this.Area =
length * breadth
override this.Print() =
printfn "Rectangle: %s" this.Name
printfn "Area: %f" this.Area
printfn "Perimiter: %f" this.Perimiter
printfn "Length: %f" this.Length
printfn "Breadth: %f" this.Breadth
let c = Circle("Foo", 2.1)
let r = Rectangle("Bar", 2.2, 3.3)
c.Print()
printfn ""
r.Print()
Submit a new solution for ruby, erlang, csharp, or fsharp
There are 12 other solutions in additional languages (clojure, cpp, fantom, groovy ...)


