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Inheritance is a way to extend functionality of a contract. Solidity supports both single as well as multiple inheritance. Following are the key highlighsts.
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A derived contract can access all non-private members including internal methods and state variables. But using this is not allowed.
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Function overriding is allowed provided function signature remains same. In case of difference of output parameters, compilation will fail.
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We can call a super contract”s function using super keyword or using super contract name.
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In case of multiple inheritance, function call using super gives preference to most derived contract.
Example
pragma solidity ^0.5.0; contract C { //private state variable uint private data; //public state variable uint public info; //constructor constructor() public { info = 10; } //private function function increment(uint a) private pure returns(uint) { return a + 1; } //public function function updateData(uint a) public { data = a; } function getData() public view returns(uint) { return data; } function compute(uint a, uint b) internal pure returns (uint) { return a + b; } } //Derived Contract contract E is C { uint private result; C private c; constructor() public { c = new C(); } function getComputedResult() public { result = compute(3, 5); } function getResult() public view returns(uint) { return result; } function getData() public view returns(uint) { return c.info(); } }
Run the above program using steps provided in Solidity First Application chapter. Run various method of Contracts. For E.getComputedResult() followed by E.getResult() shows −
Output
0: uint256: 8
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