Typescript classes make inheritance much easier to write and understand. In this lesson we look into how to set up inheritance with Typescript classes, extends and super.
class ComicBookCharacter ( constructor{ public alias: string, public health: number , public strength: number, protected secretIdentity: string ) {} } class SuperVillain extends ComicBookCharacter { flaws = ["hubris", "always explains evil plan"]; constructor(a, b, c, d) { console.log('${this.alias} eats kittens!!!'); super(a, b, c, d); } }
To review, we can set up inheritance with the extends
keyword. The protected
access modifier can't be accessed outside of a class just like the private
access modifier, but it can be accessed in derived classes.
If you don't define a constructor, the derived class will use the base class's constructor. If you do define the constructor in a derived class, super must be called before anything else can happen.