this
class Car {
String licensePlate = ""; // e.g. "New York 543 A23"
double speed = 0.0; // in kilometers per hour
double maxSpeed; = 120.0; // in kilometers per hour
void floorIt() {
speed = maxSpeed;
}
}
Within the Car
class, you don't absolutely need to prefix the field names with this.
like this.licensePlate
or
this.speed
. Just licensePlate
and speed
are sufficient. The this.
may be implied. That's because the floorIt()
method must be called by a specific instance of the Car
class, and this instance knows what its data is. Or, another way of looking at it, the every object has its own floorIt()
method.
For clarity, I will use an explicit this
today,
and I recommend you do so too,
at least initially. As you become more comfortable with Java, classes,
references, and OOP, you will be able to leave out the this
without fear of confusion. Most real-world code does not use an explicit this
.