I'm using Checkstyle and am getting an error about this method:
public final String getAdmitCodeStatus() { return admitCodeStatus; }
Here's the error I get:
Method 'getAdmitCodeStatus' is not designed for extension - needs to be abstract, final, or empty.
How is that method not compliant? Is there something I'm doing wrong that Checkstyle would bark at me about this method?
It looks to be caused by the DesignForExtension
rule. According to the documentation:
Checks that classes are designed for extension. More specifically, it enforces a programming style where superclasses provide empty "hooks" that can be implemented by subclasses.
The exact rule is that nonprivate, nonstatic methods of classes that can be subclassed must either be
abstract or final or have an empty implementation
Rationale: This API design style protects superclasses against beeing broken by subclasses. The downside is that subclasses are limited in their flexibility, in particular they cannot prevent execution of code in the superclass, but that also means that subclasses cannot corrupt the state of the superclass by forgetting to call the super method.
Source: http://sonar.15.n6.nabble.com/design-for-extension-rule-tp3200037p3200043.html
But since your method has a final
modifier, I'd say you found a bug and might want to log a bug report. https://github.com/checkstyle/checkstyle/issues
At first glance it looks like what on the earth kind of programming style is this... This just checks whether you are planing methods to be inherited or not...and then you can declare them final,abstract or empty implementation.
Then you declare it final... ;) Either the class can be final or the methods individual depending on the requirement scenario.
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