Question to classes

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Otto
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Question to classes

Post by Otto »

Question to classes: is it possible/allowed in OOP to use a class own method within the class?
Thanks in advance
Otto
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James Bott
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Post by James Bott »

Otto,

That is one of the great features.

You may want to read, or reread, the OOP articles on my website.

James
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Otto
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Post by Otto »

Thank you Enrico and James,

I made an ‘invoice class’ and an ‘invoice position (record)’ class.
Now to calculate the line total I made a function inside the InvoicePositionclass.
Amount per price – SetText to a oSay.
Here I don’t know what to use a function or a method


METHOD New
oGet nAmount valid calculate() or ::calculate()
oGet nPrice valid calculate() or ::calculate()
oSay nTotal
return Self

func calculate()
return

METHODE calculate
Return nil

What would be the right way to define the variables (nAmount,nPrice): static, local and pass them, DATA?

Hope you will help me on that.
Thanks in advance
Otto
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James Bott
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Post by James Bott »

Otto,

>I made an ‘invoice class’ and an ‘invoice position (record)’ class.
>Now to calculate the line total I made a function inside the >InvoicePositionclass.

Ok, you picked a very complicated class to start with. An invoice is an object that contains other objects. The invoice object contains a customer object, and multiple line item objects (one for each item). So you need at least three classes to create an Invoice object.

>Amount per price – SetText to a oSay.
>Here I don’t know what to use a function or a method

In pure oop you never use functions. However, in our hybrid OOP system you try not to create functions, but you can use all the FW and Harbour functions. So if you need something new, then create a method.

>METHOD New
>oGet nAmount valid calculate() or ::calculate()
>oGet nPrice valid calculate() or ::calculate()
>oSay nTotal
>return Self

I'm not sure what you were trying to do with the above. The New() method should only initialize the object.

Perhaps you should start with a Customer class instead. It would much simpler than an Invoice class. There is discussion of a customer class in my OOP articles.

James
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Otto
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Post by Otto »

Hello James,

thanks for your answer.
Where did you get all your knowledge from?
I will re-read your articles.
Regards,
Otto
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Enrico Maria Giordano
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Post by Enrico Maria Giordano »

There are bunch of books dedicated to the OOP in the libraries and on Internet.

EMG
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Antonio Linares
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Post by Antonio Linares »

Otto,

In FWH\source\classes\*.prg there are lots of examples :-)
regards, saludos

Antonio Linares
www.fivetechsoft.com
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