2

In my Java program, I need to cast an object of type List<? extends SomeBaseClass> to List<SomeBaseClass>. If I cast it directly the compiler complains (shows a warning) that there is an unchecked cast. Even though I can be sure that all the objects can be converted to their superclass, the compiler does not notice it and reports an unchecked cast. How can I get rid of the warning? Is there any other way than @SupressWarnings("unchecked")?

P.S.: The code works fine, I am just curious whether there is a better way of doing things.

Edit:

Solution: One should only do this type of cast if he is sure the he will not change the list in the future. But it is better to cast individual objects when we take them out of the list.

1
  • 1
    As a general rule, you can reduce the need for these conversions by not returning wildcard types. Within a method that takes a wildcard type as an argument, you should have very few places where you must repeat the wildcard (like Iterator variables), and there I would indeed repeat the wildcart, so I don't accidentally add to a list of an unknown subtype. Dec 19, 2010 at 23:38

3 Answers 3

7

The complier complains since if you add an object of type SomeBaseClass to your List<SomeBaseClass> list, you may "violate" the content of your List<? extends SomeBaseClass> list.

Here in an example when Number figures as your SomeBaseClass:

List<? extends Number> doubles = new ArrayList<Double>();
List<Number> nums = (List<Number>) doubles;

nums.add(new Integer(5));    // no compiler complaints here...

// doubles now contains an Integer value!

If there is no way around this in your case, I believe the @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") is your best option here.

1
  • Thank you very much, now that I know what can go wrong, I also know how to fix it - I only used the list to walk through it, I was not adding anything, so I can keep the collection of the original type and everything during the iteration like this: for (Number n : doubles)
    – k21
    Dec 18, 2010 at 21:36
1

What you're trying to do is unsafe. Consider this simple example:

import java.util.*;

class SomeBaseClass
{
}

class SomeSubClass extends SomeBaseClass
{
    public static void main(String[] a)
    {
        List<SomeSubClass> orig = new ArrayList<SomeSubClass>();
        // Compiles with no warnings.  This is the purpose of the ? extends syntax
        List<? extends SomeBaseClass> l1 = orig;
        // This is what you're trying to do
        List<SomeBaseClass> l2 = (List<SomeBaseClass>) l1;
        // Then, we add a SomeBaseClass to the new list
        l2.add(new SomeBaseClass());
        // ClassCastException, since this casts a SomeBaseClass to a SomeSubClass
        SomeSubClass first = orig.get(0);
    }
}
0

You're downcasting, which is a bad practice. Try to refactor your code to avoid this casting. And of course you should not suppress warnings in this case.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.