If you're interested in anonymous inner classes, they work as shown below.
We'll continue with the MouseListener example.
The interface for java.awt.event.MouseListener looks something like this:
public interface MouseListener {
void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e);
void mouseEntered(MouseEvent e);
void mouseExited(MouseEvent e);
void mousePressed(MouseEvent e);
void mouseReleased(MouseEvent e);
}
Somewhere in your app you may want to respond to mouse events, so using an anonymous inner class you could do something like this.
component.addMouseListener(new MouseListener() {
public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseEntered(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseExited(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseReleased(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
});
What you've done here is created a new class (without name, hence anonymous) that implements the MouseListener interface. You have not, as suggested above, created a non-abstract method on an interface.
You could have also just created a new named class ("named class" means regular old class):
class MyMouseListener implements MouseListener {
public void mouseClicked(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseEntered(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseExited(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mousePressed(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
public void mouseReleased(MouseEvent e){/*implementation goes here...*/}
}
Then somewhere else you would do component.addMouseListener(new MyMouseListener());
See the difference?
I hope this helps. Good luck.
P.S. - Read up on inheritance, interfaces, inner classes and anonymous inner classes in Java for a deeper understanding.