Is there any way to use a type variable declared by an enclosing class as a bound on a type variable declared in an inner class?
class Test<E> {
class Inner<T extends E> {}
<T extends E> void doStuff(T arg) {}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new Test<Number>().doStuff(new Integer(0)); // works fine, as expected
new Test<Number>().new Inner<Integer>(); // won't compile
}
}
javac gives this error:
Test.java:6: type parameter java.lang.Integer is not within its bound
new Test<Number>().new Inner<Integer>();
^
I can't find any combination of types that will satisfy the compiler. What's the difference between the type parameter T
as declared by Inner
versus doStuff
? Why does one work and the other doesn't?
I'm not looking for an alternative, I just want to gain a better understanding of how the language works.