The singly rooted hierarchy, in object-oriented programming, is a characteristic of most (but not all) OOP-based programming languages. In most such languages, in fact, all classes inherit directly or indirectly from a single root, usually with a name similar to Object; all classes then form a common inheritance hierarchy.
This idea was introduced first by Smalltalk, and was since used in most other object-oriented languages (notably Java and C#).
A notable exception is C++, where (mainly for compatibility with C and efficiency) there is no single object hierarchy. This feature is especially useful for container libraries - they only need to allow putting an Object in a container to allow objects of any class to be put in the container. Containers in C++ have been implemented with multiple inheritance,[1] and with help of template-based generic programming by Bjarne Stroustrup.[2][3] Other object-oriented languages without a singly rooted hierarchy include Objective-C and PHP.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Bruce Eckel, Thinking in C++ vol. 2, Ch. 9 "Multiple inheritance": section "Perspective"
- ^ MFC Programmer's SourceBook : Thinking in C Archived 2007-11-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Bruce Eckel, Thinking in C++ vol. 1, Ch. 16 "Introduction to Templates": section "The template solution"