156

In the Java snippet:

SyndFeedInput fr = new SyndFeedInput();
SyndFeed sf = fr.build(new XmlReader(myInputStream));
List<SyndEntry> entries = sf.getEntries();

the last line generates the warning

"The expression of type List needs unchecked conversion to conform to List<SyndEntry>"

What's an appropriate way to fix this?

11 Answers 11

129

This is a common problem when dealing with pre-Java 5 APIs. To automate the solution from erickson, you can create the following generic method:

public static <T> List<T> castList(Class<? extends T> clazz, Collection<?> c) {
    List<T> r = new ArrayList<T>(c.size());
    for(Object o: c)
      r.add(clazz.cast(o));
    return r;
}

This allows you to do:

List<SyndEntry> entries = castList(SyndEntry.class, sf.getEntries());

Because this solution checks that the elements indeed have the correct element type by means of a cast, it is safe, and does not require SuppressWarnings.

2
  • 5
    Regarding the method suggested by Bruno, Wouldnt this hurt application performance when having Lists with many elements?. Java would have to cast each and every one of them.
    – will824
    Apr 15, 2011 at 17:06
  • 2
    If you want guarantees, that is the cost. Is there another less expensive option? Obviously, if you have control over the invoked raw collection returning method, or even invoking the method or accessing the collection using a lazy-demand approach. Anything that considers the entire collection after the method invocation?
    – dan
    May 1, 2017 at 16:44
108

Since getEntries returns a raw List, it could hold anything.

The warning-free approach is to create a new List<SyndEntry>, then cast each element of the sf.getEntries() result to SyndEntry before adding it to your new list. Collections.checkedList does not do this checking for you—although it would have been possible to implement it to do so.

By doing your own cast up front, you're "complying with the warranty terms" of Java generics: if a ClassCastException is raised, it will be associated with a cast in the source code, not an invisible cast inserted by the compiler.

3
  • 11
    Thanks -- that's an interesting insight about the "warranty" and the invisible cast done by the compiler versus a cast done explicitly in my own code.
    – user46277
    Dec 16, 2008 at 5:30
  • 1
    Yes, the value of un-reified generics is somewhat limited, but that is one thing it does provide. Just to clarify, this requires that your code compiles without type safety warnings.
    – erickson
    Dec 16, 2008 at 7:32
  • Hi erickson, I agree that this indeed the best solution. Check my answer stackoverflow.com/questions/367626/… for a generic version of this solution. May 17, 2010 at 10:31
28

It looks like SyndFeed is not using generics.

You could either have an unsafe cast and a warning suppression:

@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
List<SyndEntry> entries = (List<SyndEntry>) sf.getEntries();

or call Collections.checkedList - although you'll still need to suppress the warning:

@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
List<SyndEntry> entries = Collections.checkedList(sf.getEntries(), SyndEntry.class);
2
  • Since they both suppress the warning, any advantages to one or the other, or a preference? Thanks! Also: is the cast necessary if the unchecked suppression is in place? May 13, 2014 at 23:44
  • 3
    @Yar: Well, Collections.checkedList will prevent the addition of any non-SyndEntry elements later. I personally don't use checkedList much, but then I also don't often get into this unchecked cast situation anyway...
    – Jon Skeet
    May 14, 2014 at 5:45
9

Did you write the SyndFeed?

Does sf.getEntries return List or List<SyndEntry>? My guess is it returns List and changing it to return List<SyndEntry> will fix the problem.

If SyndFeed is part of a library, I don't think you can remove the warning without adding the @SuppressWarning("unchecked") annotation to your method.

3
3

If you are using Guava and all you want to do is iterate through your values:

for(SyndEntry entry: Iterables.filter(sf.getEntries(), SyndEntry.class){
  ...
}

If you need an actual List you can use

List<SyndEntry> list = Lists.newArrayList(
    Iterables.filter(sf.getEntries(), SyndEntry.class));

or

List<SyndEntry> list = ImmutableList.copyOf(
    Iterables.filter(sf.getEntries(), SyndEntry.class));
1
SyndFeedInput fr = new SyndFeedInput();
SyndFeed sf = fr.build(new XmlReader(myInputStream));
List<?> entries = sf.getEntries();
1
  • 2
    Even if the code provided here solves the problem, i'd encourage you to briefly explain why it does that. Please explain why the posted answer solves the issue.
    – sbrattla
    May 8, 2015 at 8:50
1

If you look at the javadoc for the class SyndFeed (I guess you are referring to the class com.sun.syndication.feed.synd.SyndFeed), the method getEntries() doesn't return java.util.List<SyndEntry>, but returns just java.util.List.

So you need an explicit cast for this.

0
0

If you don't want to put @SuppressWarning("unchecked") on each sf.getEntries() call, you can always make a wrapper that will return List.

See this other question

0

Even easier

return new ArrayList<?>(getResultOfHibernateCallback(...))

1
  • Then you would deal with proper casting (re-casting?) at usage time for each element in ArrayList<?>.
    – ingyhere
    Mar 21, 2013 at 21:25
0

The answer of Bruno De Fraine is great. However if the size of input argument "Collection<?> c" is 0 then the routine crashes with null pointer. I suggest a minor improvement to avoid this (and I give the version for HashSet):

public static <T> HashSet<T> castHashSet(Class<? extends T> clazz, Collection<?> c) {
  int cSize = (c == null) ? 0 : c.size();
  HashSet<T> hashSet = new HashSet<T>(cSize);
  if (c != null) {
    for (Object o : c)
      hashSet.add(clazz.cast(o));
    }
    return hashSet;
}
0

Java 8 style

private static <T> List<T> castList(Class<? extends T> clazz, Collection<?> c) {
        return c.stream().map(o -> clazz.cast(o)).collect(Collectors.toList());
}

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