Sometimes you want the subclass to do more than what a superclass’ method is doing. You want to still execute the superclass method, but you also want to override the method to do something else. But, since you have overridden the parent method how can you still call it? You can use super.method() to force the parent’s method to be called.
We’ve used super() before to call the superclass’ constructor. There are two uses of the keyword super:
super(); or super(arguments); calls just the super constructor if put in as the first line of a subclass constructor.
super.method(); calls a superclass’ method (not constructors).
The keyword super is very useful in allowing us to first execute the superclass method and then add on to it in the subclass.
In the example below, the Student class overrides the getFood method of the Person class, and it uses super.getFood() to call the Person getFood method before adding on to it. Here, a Person is associated with the food “Hamburger” and a Student is associated with “Hamburger” and “Taco”.
How does this work? Remember that an object always keeps a reference to the class that created it and always looks for a method during execution starting in the class that created it. If it finds the method in the class that created it, it will execute that method. If it doesn’t find it in the class that created it, it will look at the parent of that class. It will keep looking up the ancestor chain until it finds the method, all the way up to the Object class. The method has to be there, or else the code would not have compiled.
When the student getFood() method is executed it will start executing the getFood method in Student. When it gets to super.getFood() it will execute the getFood method in Person. This method will return the string "Hamburger". Then execution will continue in the getFood method of Student and return the string "Hamburger and Taco".
You can step through this example using the Java Visualizer by clicking on the following link:
Super Example.
The toString method is commonly overridden. A subclass can override toString but in its new toString method, it can call super.toString() to get a string to which it can add its own instance variables.
// overridden toString() in subclass
public String toString()
{
return super.toString() + "\n" + subclassInstanceVariables;
}