Polymorphism
Subtype polymorphism, almost universally called polymorphism in the context of object-oriented programming, is the ability to create a variable, a function, or an object that has more than one form.
The word derives from the Greek "πολυμορφισμός" meaning "having multiple forms". In principle, polymorphism can however arise in other computing contexts and it shares important similarities to the concept of degeneracy in biology.
The purpose of polymorphism is to implement a style of programming called message-passing in the literature[citation needed], in which objects of various types define a common interface of operations for users. In strongly typed languages, polymorphism usually means that type A somehow derives from type B, or type C implements an interface that represents type B. In weakly typed languages types are implicitly polymorphic.
Operator overloading of the numeric operators (+, -, *, and /) allows polymorphic treatment of the various numerical types: integer, unsigned integer, float, decimal, etc.; each of which have different ranges, bit patterns, and representations. Another common example is the use of the "+" operator which allows similar or polymorphic treatment of numbers (addition), strings (concatenation), and lists (attachment). This is a lesser used feature of polymorphism.
The primary usage of polymorphism in industry (object-oriented programming theory) is the ability of objects belonging to different types to respond to method, field, or property calls of the same name, each one according to an appropriate type-specific behavior. The programmer (and the program) does not have to know the exact type of the object in advance, and so the exact behavior is determined at run-time (this is called late binding or dynamic binding).
The different objects involved only need to present a compatible interface to the clients' (calling routines). That is, there must be public or internal methods, fields, events, and properties with the same name and the same parameter sets in all thesuperclasses, subclasses and interfaces. In principle, the object types may be unrelated, but since they share a common interface, they are often implemented as subclasses of the same superclass. Though it is not required, it is understood that the different methods will also produce similar results (for example, returning values of the same type).
(Subtype) polymorphism is not the same as method overloading or method overriding, (that is known instead as ad-hoc polymorphism). Polymorphism is only concerned with the application of specific implementations to an interface or a more generic base class. Method overloading refers to methods that have the same name but different signatures inside the same class. Method overriding is where a subclass replaces the implementation of one or more of its parent's methods. Neither method overloading nor method overriding are by themselves implementations of polymorphism.