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Generics
The Fine Print
A Generic Class is Shared by All Its Invocations
What does the following code fragment print?
List <String> l1 = new ArrayList<String>();
List<Integer> l2 = new ArrayList<Integer>();
System.out.println(l1.getClass() == l2.getClass());
You might be tempted to say false, but you'd be wrong. It prints
true, because all instances of a generic class have the same
run-time class, regardless of their actual type parameters.
Indeed, what makes a class generic is the fact that it has the same behavior
for all of its possible type parameters; the same class can be viewed as
having many different types.
As consequence, the static variables and methods of a class are also
shared among all the instances. That is why it is illegal to refer to
the type parameters of a type declaration in a static method or initializer,
or in the declaration or initializer of a static variable.
Casts and InstanceOf
Another implication of the fact that a generic class is shared among all its
instances, is that it usually makes no sense to ask an instance if it is
an instance of a particular invocation of a generic type:
Collection cs = new ArrayList<String>();
if (cs instanceof Collection<String>) { ...} // Illegal.
similarly, a cast such as
Collection<String> cstr = (Collection<String>) cs; // Unchecked warning,
gives an unchecked warning, since this isn't something the runtime system is
going to check for you.
The same is true of type variables
<T> T badCast(T t, Object o) {return (T) o; // Unchecked warning.
}
Type variables don't exist at run time. This means that they entail no
performance overhead in either time nor space, which is nice. Unfortunately,
it also means that you can't reliably use them in casts.
Arrays
The component type of an array object may not be a type variable or a parameterized type, unless
it is an (unbounded) wildcard type.You can declare array types whose
element type is a type variable or a parameterized type, but not array objects.
This is annoying, to be sure. This restriction is necessary to avoid
situations like:
List<String>[] lsa = new List<String>[10]; // Not really allowed.
Object o = lsa;
Object[] oa = (Object[]) o;
List<Integer> li = new ArrayList<Integer>();
li.add(new Integer(3));
oa[1] = li; // Unsound, but passes run time store check
String s = lsa[1].get(0); // Run-time error: ClassCastException.
If arrays of parameterized type were allowed, the example above would compile
without any unchecked warnings, and yet fail at run-time. We've had type-safety
as a primary design goal of generics. In particular, the language is
designed to guarantee
that if your entire application
has been compiled without unchecked warnings using javac -source 1.5,
it is type safe.
However, you can still use wildcard arrays. Here are two variations
on the code above. The first forgoes the use of both array objects
and array types whose element type is parameterized. As a result,
we have to cast explicitly to get a String out of the array.
List<?>[] lsa = new List<?>[10]; // OK, array of unbounded wildcard type.
Object o = lsa;
Object[] oa = (Object[]) o;
List<Integer> li = new ArrayList<Integer>();
li.add(new Integer(3));
oa[1] = li; // Correct.
String s = (String) lsa[1].get(0); // Run time error, but cast is explicit.
In the next variation, we refrain from creating an array object
whose element type is parameterized, but still use an array type
with a parameterized element type. This is legal, but generates an unchecked
warning. Indeed, the code is unsafe, and eventually an error occurs.
List<String>[] lsa = new List<?>[10]; // Unchecked warning. This is unsafe!
Object o = lsa;
Object[] oa = (Object[]) o;
List<Integer> li = new ArrayList<Integer>();
li.add(new Integer(3));
oa[1] = li; // Correct.
String s = lsa[1].get(0); // Run time error, but we were warned.
Similarly, attempting to create an array object whose element
type is a type variable causes a compile-time error:
<T> T[] makeArray(T t) {
return new T[100]; // Error.
}
Since type variables
don't exist at run time, there is no way to determine what the actual
array type would be.
The way to work around these kinds of limitations is to use class literals
as run time type tokens, as described in the next section,
Class Literals as Runtime-Type Tokens.