I would like to make an enum type that would have a value, and could be converted vice-versa from and to that value (basically the enum would be a type-safe alias for that value, and would imporve code readability).
I need this because I am handling low-level, embedded stuff, and writing registers, and such. Many times a few bits of a register have special meanings. Like bit 10-11 of one register is the active CYCCNT " 00 - CYCCNT_24, 01 - CYCCNT_26, 11 - CYCNT_28 "
Now I would like to do something like this:
void setActiveCYCCNT(CYCCNT_ENUM newvalue)
{
Target.writeRegister(ADDRESS, newvalue.value());
}
CYCCNT_ENUM getActiveCYCCNT()
{
return CYCCNT_ENUM.fromValue(Target.readRegister(ADDRESS));
}
I thought doing something like this (but is syntactically incorrect on many levels):
It seems that static members cannot access T. I'm not sure why that is the case, doesn't java generate a new class for each referenced generic type? Secondly it seems that java does not support generic enums?
public enum ConvertableEnum<T> {
private static Map<T, ConvertableEnum<T>> map = new HashMap<T, ConvertableEnum<T>>();
T value;
public ConvertableEnum(T t)
{
this.value = t;
map.put(t, this);
}
public static ConvertableEnum<T> fromValue(T t)
{
return map.get(t);
}
}
After this one could do:
public enum CYCCNT : ConvertableEnum<int>
{
CYCCNT_24(0x00), CYCCNT_26(0x01), CYCCNT_28(0x03);
}
And use that.
My question is how can I achieve what I would like to achieve in my syntactically incorrect code?
Thanks for your help, axos88