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Why Protected Access Modifier is Used in Java
The data members and methods of a class can be accessed from the same package or sub-classes in a different package if they are specified with the protected access modifier. The keyword protected is used to specify this modifier.
A program that demonstrates the protected access modifier in Java is given as follows:
Example
class A { protected int a = 9; public void printA() { System.out.println("Value of a = " + a); } } public class Demo { public static void main(String args[]) { A obj = new A(); obj.a = 18; obj.printA(); } }
Output
Value of a = 18
Now let us understand the above program.
The class A has a protected data member a that can be accessed from the same package or sub-classes in a different package. The public method printA() displays the value of a. A code snippet which demonstrates this is as follows:
class A { protected int a = 9; public void printA() { System.out.println("Value of a = " + a); } }
In the main() method in class Demo, an object obj of class A is created. The value of obj.a is modified which is possible as it is protected and the modification is done in the same package. Then printA() method is called. A code snippet which demonstrates this is as follows:
public class Demo { public static void main(String args[]) { A obj = new A(); obj.a = 18; obj.printA(); } }