@Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Target(value=TYPE) public @interface Polymorphic
Tags a given entity type as polymorphically abstract. This means that the given type will not peer to any table, but rather represent a polymorphic supertype to other entities (entities which extend the given interface). Unlike conventional inheritence, which also causes the supertype to not peer to a table, polymorphic type inheritence allows instances of the subtype to be stored in the database into fields which are "typed" in ActiveObjects as the supertype. All of this is really much simpler than it sounds:
public interface Person extends Entity { public Computer getComputer(); public void setComputer(Computer computer); } @Polymorphic public interface Computer extends Entity { public float getSpeed(); public void setSpeed(float speed); } public interface Mac extends Computer {} public interface PC extends Computer {}
In this case, Computer
does not correspond with any table in
the database. Likewise, Person
has no foreign keys for the
corresponding field to getComputer()
. When an entity type is
polymorphic, its subtypes can be used polymorphically as they are in
Person
. This is essentially the conceptual analog of an
abstract class when mapped into the database.
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