Interface oop

interface
(English language version of stackoverflow wordsalad): An interface is struct with only procedures, where the pointer that the function has as its first parameter is late binded to another struct(selected from any number of structs) which contains data at object instantiation. It is a workaround cludge to get around the fact that multiple inheritence is impossible in oop, because you can never be certain that you have the correct struct for functions which have the same name in different classes(structs).

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1913098/what-is-the-difference-between-an-interface-and-abstract-class Abstract classes can have constants, members, method stubs (methods without a body) and defined methods, whereas interfaces can only have constants and methods stubs. Methods and members of an abstract class can be defined with any visibility, whereas all methods if an interface must be defined as public (they are defined public by default). When inheriting an abstract class, a concrete child class must define the abstract methods, whereas an abstract class can extend another abstract class and abstract methods from the parent class don't have to be defined. Similarly, an interface extending another interface is not responsible for implementing methods from the parent interface. This is because interfaces cannot define any implementation. A child class can only extend a single class (abstract or concrete), whereas an interface can extend or a class can implement multiple other interfaces. A child class can define abstract methods with the same or less restrictive visibility, whereas a class implementing an interface must define the methods with the exact same visibility (public).