19 lines
1.4 KiB
Text
19 lines
1.4 KiB
Text
/*
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* JUSTIFICATION FOR NOT HAVING SEPERATE CLASSES FOR PLANETS AND MOONS
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*
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* I did originally have that, but once I implemented the ability to switch the focused planet
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* (press the numbers keys), differentiating between 'planet' and 'moon' became meaningless as
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* any given point was either the centre point (as represented by the `CentrePoint` class) or a
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* satellite of it. The only difference between a planet-type and moon-type satellite was whether
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* they orbited the centre point in the Sol view, or another satellite. As such, having separate
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* classes for them seemed incorrect, so I went for overloaded constructors instead. It would be
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* easy enough to return to `Planet` and `Moon` classes that extend `Satellite` with their seperate
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* constructors, however. As per polymorphism any instance of a `Satellite` object being expected
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* in `Solar` could take a `Planet` or `Moon` object as its argument and be fine, so `Solar` might
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* not even have to be changed at all.
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*
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* However, I've included an alternate version with Moon and Planet classes that is fully functional,
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* to demonstrate my understanding of inheritance and polymorphism. As this was completed after the
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* review, I've marked it as such and included the original version with the overloaded constructors
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* that was marked.[NOTE: This alternate version has not been included here]
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*/
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