Is there any way to avoid the clutter of adding all the types to the class definition when implementing an interface such as this?
MyInterface.java
import java.util.List;
abstract class BaseA {}
abstract class BaseB {}
abstract class BaseC {}
interface MyInterface<T extends BaseA, U extends BaseB, V extends BaseC> {
public void foo( List<? extends T> list );
public void bar( List<? extends U> list );
public void baz( List<? extends V> list );
}
MyImplementation.java
/* Some concrete implementations of the abstract classes used in the interface */
class A extends BaseA{}
class B extends BaseB{}
class C extends BaseC{}
class MyImplementation implements MyInterface<A,B,C> {
public void foo( List<? extends A> list){}
public void bar( List<? extends B> list){}
public void baz( List<? extends C> list){}
}
What I don't like about this is that stuff that I find to be method specific, such as the type of parameters, is mixed with the class declaration. As in this case, where I for each generic method in the interface have to add one formal type in "the bracket section".
Is there another way of achieving the above (forcing a caller of the implementation to use a specific subclass of the parameter class in the interface) without all of the "clutter"?
I am not too into generics, and the above code is basically based on an answer to this question.