3

I wanted to create an interface for copying an object to a destination object of the same class. The simple way is to use casting:

import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.internal.runners.JUnit4ClassRunner;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;

@RunWith(JUnit4ClassRunner.class)
public class TestGenerics {
public static interface Copyable {
    public void copy(Copyable c);
}

public static class A implements Copyable {
    private String aField = "--A--";
    protected void innerCopy(Copyable c) {
        A a = (A)c;
        System.out.println(a.aField);
    }
    public void copy(Copyable c) {
        innerCopy(c);
    }
}

public static class B extends A {
    private String bField = "--B--";
    protected void innerCopy(Copyable c) {
        B b = (B)c;
        super.innerCopy(b);
        System.out.println(b.bField);
    }
}

@Test
public void testCopy() {
    Copyable b1 = new B();
    Copyable b2 = new B();
    b1.copy(b2);
}
}

But also i've found a way it can be done using generics:

import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.internal.runners.JUnit4ClassRunner;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;

@RunWith(JUnit4ClassRunner.class)
public class TestGenerics {
    public static interface Copyable<T> {
        public void copy(T t);
    }

    public static class A<T extends A<?>> implements Copyable<T> {
        private String a = "--A--";
        public void copy(T t) {
            System.out.println(t.a);
        }
    }

    public static class B<T extends B<?>> extends A<T> {
        private String b = "--B--";
        public void copy(T t) {
            super.copy(t);
            System.out.println(t.b);
        }
    }

    @Test
    @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
    public void testCopy() {
        Copyable b1 = new B();
        Copyable b2 = new B();
        b1.copy(b2);
    }
}

Though the only way i've found to get rid of warnings is the annotation. And it feels like something is wrong. So what's wrong? I can accept that something is wrong in the root of the problem. So any sort of clarification is welcome.

2
  • Which line do you get the warning on, and what does it say?
    – Michael Myers
    Mar 10, 2009 at 20:03
  • all 3 lines inside testCopy() give warnings about references to generic type should be parametrized Mar 10, 2009 at 22:04

6 Answers 6

4

Your interface definition:

public interface Copyable<T extends Copyable<T>> {
    void copy(T copyFrom);
}

Your implementation:

public class Example implements Copyable<Example> {
    private Object data;
    void copy(Example copyFrom) {
        data = copyFrom.data;
    }
    //nontrivial stuff
}

That should take care of your warnings.

1
  • Yes, this is what i've started from, but now how do you extend the Example class to keep copy(...) working the same way? Mar 11, 2009 at 4:54
3

Assuming you don't want to subclass further you just need:

public static /*final*/ class AClass implements Copyable<AClass> {

For an abstract class, you do the "enum" thing:

public static abstract class AClass<T extends AClass<T>> implements Copyable<T> {
4
  • Your code looks similar to what i've posted. But i still don't understand 2 things. First: what and how should i call to make it go without warnings? Second: is my way of using generics suitable for this case or does it look just like bad code that happens to work as intended? Mar 10, 2009 at 22:34
  • And also, what does ["enum" thing] mean? Mar 10, 2009 at 22:36
  • You would call constructr the first example with new AClass. For the second example you would subclass using a form similar to the first. The enum thing - look at the definition of java.lang.Enum (Enum<E extends Enum<E>>). Mar 11, 2009 at 11:06
  • Thanks! Your pointer to java.lang.Enum (Enum<E extends Enum<E>> helped me to find more useful info on this subject. Mar 11, 2009 at 11:31
2

In testCopy, one of the warnings is because you're instantiating a "raw type" of Copyable rather than some concrete Copyable<T>. Once you instantiate a Copyable, it can only be applied to Ts (which include subtypes of T). In order to instantiate with a formal type, the class definitions will need to be changed slightly:

public static class A<T extends A> implements Copyable<T>
public static class B<T extends B> extends A<T>

The next issue is that a Copyable<B> can only be passed a compile-time type of B (based on the definition of Copyable). And testCopy() above is passing it a compile-time type of Copyable. Below are some examples of what will work, with brief descriptions:

public void testExamples()
{
    // implementation of A that applies to A and subtypes
    Copyable<A> aCopier = new A<A>();

    // implementation of B that applies to B and subtypes
    Copyable<B> bCopier = new B<B>();

    // implementation of A that applies to B and subtypes
    Copyable<B> bCopier2 = new A<B>();
}
1
  • A<A>, A<B> etc give the same warning, because types in brackets are still generics Mar 11, 2009 at 4:07
0

I keep trying to figure out a way to get rid of the warnings in your first approach and I can't come up with anything that works. Even so, I think the first approach is the lesser of two evils. An unsafe cast is better than needing to give your classes such a complicated api.

A completely separate approach would be to override Object.clone() and implement Cloneable.

1
  • Yes, i'm thinking the same about 'lesser of two evils'. But still its interesting to find out if this way of using generics is close to what they are intented for or is it just a bad code that works. Cloneable wont solve my problem because i need to copy to an existing object. Mar 11, 2009 at 4:12
0

This is the best possible code of second approach. It compiles without any warnings.

import static org.junit.Assert.fail;

import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.internal.runners.JUnit4ClassRunner;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;

@RunWith(JUnit4ClassRunner.class)
public class TestGenerics {
    public static interface Copyable<T> {
        public void copy(T t);
    }

    public static class A<T extends A<T>> implements Copyable<T> {
        private String a = "--A--";
        public void copy(T t) {
            System.out.println(t.a);
        }
        @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
        public static Copyable<Object> getInstance() {
            return new A();
        }

    }

    public static class B<T extends B<T>> extends A<T> {
        private String b = "--B--";
        public void copy(T t) {
            super.copy(t);
            System.out.println(t.b);
        }
        @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
        public static Copyable<Object> getInstance() {
            return new B();
        }
    }


    @Test
    public void testCopy() {
        Copyable<Object> b1 = B.getInstance();
        Copyable<Object> b2 = B.getInstance();
        Copyable<Object> a = A.getInstance();
        b1.copy(b2); // this works as intended
        try {
            b1.copy(a); // this throws ClassCastException
            fail();
        } catch (ClassCastException cce) {
        }
    }
}

And also i figured out all that happens in this program with help of reflection:

       for (Method method : A.class.getMethods()) {
               if (method.getName().equals("copy")) {
                       System.out.println(method.toString());
               }

       }
       for (Method method : B.class.getMethods()) {
               if (method.getName().equals("copy")) {
                       System.out.println(method.toString());
               }

       }

Here is the output:

public void com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$A.copy(com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$A)
public void com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$A.copy(java.lang.Object)

public void com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$B.copy(com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$B)
public void com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$B.copy(com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$A)
public void com.sbp.core.TestGenerics$A.copy(java.lang.Object)

It means that:

  1. The copy(...) methods in A and B make compiler generate "bridges" - 2 different methods for each, one with reifed argument type from ancestor (reified T from Copyable becomes Object, reified "T extends A" from A becomes A) and that is why it's override and not overload, and the other one with reified argument type for defining class. First method (with autogenerated body) downcasts its argument to call the second (they call it a bridge). Because of this downcasting we get ClassCastException in runtime if we call b1.copy(a).

  2. It looks like direct type casting is cleaner and better tool for my problem and generics are better used in their direct purpose - to enforce compile time type checking.

0

I've learned Scala and now i know that the thing i wanted 2 years ago could have been achieved with contravariant type parameter and Scala's type system:

trait CopyableTo[-T] {
  def copyTo(t: T)
}

class A(private var a: Int) extends CopyableTo[A] {
  override def copyTo(t: A) {
    println("A:copy")
    t.a = this.a
  }
}

class B(private var a: Int, private var b: Int) extends A(a) with CopyableTo[B] {
  def copyTo(t: B) {
    println("B:copy")
    super.copyTo(t)
    t.b = this.b
  }
}

@Test
def zzz {
  val b1 = new B(1, 2)
  val a1 = new A(3)
  val b2 = new B(4, 5)
  b1.copyTo(a1)
  a1.copyTo(b1)
  b1.copyTo(b2)
}

Java type system is too weak for this.

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.