What is the Concrete class in java

JustCode :

According to this document, and many similar documents, a concrete class is described as:

A concrete class in Java is any such class which has implementation of all of its inherited members either from interface or abstract class

And can used like this:

public abstract class A {
 public abstract void methodA();
}

interface B {
 public void printB();
}

public class C extends A implements B {
   public void methodA() {
        System.out.print("I am abstract implementation");
    }

  public void printB() {
       System.out.print("I am interface implementation");
   }
}

In the above example class C is a concrete class.

Is this the only way to create a concrete class. Can you give me more info about concrete class?

mdewit :

A concrete class is a class that has an implementation for all of its methods that were inherited from abstract or implemented via interfaces. It also does not define any abstract methods of its own. This means that an instance of the class can be created/allocated with the new keyword without having to implement any methods first. Therefore it can be inferred that any class that is not an abstract class or interface is a concrete class.

In your code above, C will be a concrete class as it implements all abstract methods inherited from A and implemented from B. Also, it does not define any abstract methods of its own.

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