I tried to run the example of GNU Smalltalk in the documentation but ran into an issue.
Object subclass: Account [
  | balance |
  new [
    | r |
    r := super new.
    r init.
    ^r
  ]
  init [
    'initialize account' printNl.
    balance := 0
  ]
  get [
    ^balance
  ]
]
In the new method the init message is never sent to the Account method.
Heres my output:
st> Account new get
nil
st> Account new init get
'initialize account'
0
I took this example from the GNU Smalltalk Documentation.
Can somebody help me spot the error?  I assumed that perhaps the init method of super is called, but Object does not have a init method.  Furthermore should super create a instance of the current class?
Thanks Benjamin for the answer
So my problem was that i did not distinguish between class functions (new) and Object functions
Fixed Code
Object subclass: Account [
  | balance |
  init [ balance := 0 ]
  get [ ^balance ]
]
Account class extend [
  new [ ^ (super new init) ]
]
st> Account new get
0
 
                        
There is a slight change you've made to the code that means it won't work.
In Smalltalk, methods can be attached in one of two places: they can apply to instances of a class, which in this case would be account objects (like the one you get back from running
Account new), or they can be class methods, which means they apply to the actual class itself,Account.Account initis an instance method. It sets some sane defaults for the instance of theAccountclass you've made. You wrote that correctly, and it's behaving as it should.On the other hand, you've changed
Account newfrom a class method to an instance method. When it's a class method, it replacesAccounts existingnewmethod with one that callsinit. When it's an instance method, it doesn't really do anything, since you're not going to be callingnewon the instance.The fix is easy enough: tell GNU Smalltalk that the
newmethod is a class method. To do that, you just put the method onAccount class >> newinstead of loose in theAccountclass.