Difference between revisions of "Generics"

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* The reason why it such polymorphism is possible with Arrays but not with collections is because of Type Erasure.
 
* Since there is no type information at run-time, JVM cannot raise an exception.
 
* This will be exactly the same problem when type-safe collections are mixed with non-type safe ones.
 
* So, the compiler will prevent such polymorphic assignments when we are dealing with type-safe collections.
 
 
WHY ?
 
WHY ?
  
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* The reason why it such polymorphism is possible with Arrays but not with collections is because of Type Erasure.
 +
* Since there is no type information at run-time, JVM cannot raise an exception.
 +
* This will be exactly the same problem when type-safe collections are mixed with non-type safe ones.
 +
* So, the compiler will prevent such polymorphic assignments when we are dealing with type-safe collections.
  
 
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[[Category:OCPJP]]

Revision as of 03:22, 31 May 2011

  • Generics is a way to enforce ONLY compile-time type safety.
  • All the type information is not present at run-time. The compiler strips out type information from the bytecode using a process called type erasure.
  • WHY Type erasure ? To ensure backward compatibility with legacy code.
  • This compile-time safety is broken when generic and non-generic legacy code are mixed up.
  • Watch out when autoboxing is involved with legacy code.
List l = new ArrayList();
l.add(123); //Auto-boxing happens.
int i = l.get(0); //Compile-time error. Autounboxing cant work because get() returns Object and not Integer.


Polymorphism and Generics

List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();

Polymorphism only applies to the base type i.e list can be declared as arraylist You CANNOT do this:

 List<Animal> obj = new ArrayList<Dog>(); //NOT POSSIBLE

WHY ?

To prevent scenarios where you cannot add say, a Cat object to a Dog List. If the above conversion were possible it will be possible to do so. See below:

//NOTE : This is not possible actually, because the compiler prevents it.
public void foo() {
   List<Dog> dList = new ArrayList<Dog>();
   addAnimal(dList); //Compiler flags an error here. a Dog list cannot be assigned to an Animal list
}

private void addAnimal(List<Animal> aList) {
  aList.add(new Cat());
}

However, the SAME thing is possible with Arrays

public void foo() {
   Dog[] dA = new Dog[]{};
   addAnimal(dList); 
}

private void addAnimal(Animal[] aa) {
  aa[0] = new Cat(); //This will cause a runtime ArrayStoreException
}
  • The reason why it such polymorphism is possible with Arrays but not with collections is because of Type Erasure.
  • Since there is no type information at run-time, JVM cannot raise an exception.
  • This will be exactly the same problem when type-safe collections are mixed with non-type safe ones.
  • So, the compiler will prevent such polymorphic assignments when we are dealing with type-safe collections.