Since we can't instantiate an abstract class, then what is the necessity of having constructors in abstract class?
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                    2http://stackoverflow.com/questions/260666/abstract-class-constructor-in-java – tim_yates Jul 02 '10 at 08:45
4 Answers
Abstract classes are designed to be extended, each constructor from the child must perform a call to a constructor from the base class, thus you need constructors in your abstract class.
The abstract class is a skeleton and thus makes no sense to instantiate it directly since it is still incomplete (children will provide the rest).
 
    
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An example:
public abstract class BaseClass
{
    private String member;
    public BaseClass(String member)
    {
        this.member = member;
    }
    ... abstract methods...
}
public class ImplementingClass extends BaseClass
{
    public ImplementingClass(String member)
    {
        /* Implementing class must call a constructor from the abstract class */
        super(member);
    }
    ... method implementations...
}
 
    
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We can use a abstract class constructor to execute code that is relevant for every subclass. This way preventing duplicate code
 
    
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Abstract classes can have fields and non-abstract methods(what makes it an abstract class rater than an interface). The fields probably need to be initialized when a class that extends it is instantiated.
Having a constructor in the abstract class allows you to call super(foo); to initialize them as opposed to doing it directly
 
    
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