1

I have the following abstract class:

public abstract class AbstractGroup {

private String name;
.
.
.
}

I have two empty classes that extend this abstract class:

public class GroupA extends AbstractGroup {
}

public class GroupB extends AbstractGroup {
}

Is there a way to cast the following without getting a ClassCastException: (group is of type GroupA)

group = (GroupB)group;

I need this object instance to become GroupB.

6 Answers 6

10

It's not possible. You cannot cast classes horizontally but only vertically. GroupA is not the subtype of GroupB so the exception always will be raised.

1

No you cannot, because a GroupA is not an instance of GroupB. How about:

public abstract class AbstractGroup {

  public Enum Group { GroupA, GroupB; }

  private String name;
  private Group membership;
.
.
.
}

And then:

group.setMembership(GroupB);
1

No, you can't. You can cast up or down on Inheritance hierarchy.

5
  • Actually you're wrong. You can cast only up on the hierarchy. Try this (casting down), see what happens: pastebin.com/iPrCZWGd . Jun 26, 2012 at 9:43
  • 2
    casting down is possible if you have actually object of subclass and reference of superclass.
    – Ahmad
    Jun 26, 2012 at 9:47
  • someMethod(SuperClass obj){ if (obj instanceof SubClass){ SubClass subref= (SubClass) obj; } }......Isn't it valid ..??
    – Ahmad
    Jun 26, 2012 at 9:57
  • Yes, that works, but only because you're not actually casting obj. obj is already of type SubClass, you're just changing the reference to SubClass. If obj is actually of type SuperClass, then instanceof will return false. Jun 26, 2012 at 10:02
  • well..I'll be pleased if you give me an example where actually type of an object is being changed.
    – Ahmad
    Jun 26, 2012 at 10:04
1

What you are asking for is not called casting, but conversion. Both terms are covered by the umbrella term coercion. Java will not convert an object for you automatically and it couldn't even if it tried since this is generally an ill-defined problem. You must write your own code that will do the conversion -- either in the form of a conversion constructor, or some static conversion method, or maybe an instance method in the source object that returns the converted object.

0

No it isn't possible. But what you may like to do is add some constructor to the Groups to allow construction from a different implementation.

public class GroupA extends AbstractGroup {
    public GroupA(AbstractGroup otherGroup) {
        this.name = otherGroup.name;
    }
}

However if you find yourself needing to do this then perhaps your design may be wrong.

-1

Possible if you do something like:

    GroupA groupAobj = new GroupA();
    AbstractGroup abstractObj = (AbstractGroup) groupAobj;
    GroupB groupBobj = (GroupB) abstractObj;

the code compiles and runs.

5
  • compiles, runs and throws an ClassCastException: GroupA cannot be cast to GroupB - the question is how to avoid this!
    – user85421
    Jun 27, 2012 at 11:53
  • it throws an exception. Why don't you just catch the exception and work accordingly. Jun 27, 2012 at 18:22
  • an Exception means it does not work. Why I don't catch it? because: 1st - it's not my problem, actually I don't see why that is needed; 2nd - the question (my understanding) is how to obtain an instance of GroupB from an instance of GroupA WITHOUT getting the Exception!
    – user85421
    Jun 28, 2012 at 7:27
  • Then let's get to what actually is your need. Why do need to cast an object constructed by the classA constructor to refer to classB when the constructor of classB hasn't been run. Jun 28, 2012 at 9:56
  • AGAIN: why my needs? I am NOT "hhh3112" the author of the question, I have no idea why he needs it - but I know that your code is not working, it does not solve the problem!
    – user85421
    Jun 28, 2012 at 12:30

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.