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Revised: Sat May 07 11:13:14 CDT 2016
This page is part of a Book titled XNA Game Studio .
This module is one in a collection of modules designed primarily for teaching GAME 1343 Game and Simulation Programming I at Austin Community College in Austin, TX. These modules are intended tosupplement and not to replace the textbook.
An earlier module titled Getting Started provided information on how to get started programming with Microsoft's XNA Game Studio.
Object-oriented programs exhibit three main characteristics:
I have explained encapsulation, inheritance, compile-time polymorphism, and runtime polymorphism using method overriding and class inheritance in earliermodules. This module will explain the importance of the Object class in polymorphic behavior. I will defer an explanation of polymorphism usinginterface inheritance until a future module.
I recommend that you open another copy of this module in a separate browser window and use the following links to easily find and view the Figuresand Listings while you are reading about them.
In this module, I will explain the use of the Object class as a completely generic type for storing references to objects of subclasstypes, and will explain how that results in a very useful form of runtime polymorphism.
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