I asked a similiar question 10 minutes ago, but pasted the wrong code snippet. I'm really sorry about that.
I'm currently facing an issue with base and subclasses.
While having a single object as parameter (method single) the compiler doesn't complain.
But if it comes to lists the compiler forces me to declare the list as <? extends Base>
After that I'm no longer allowed to add objects of the base type to that list.
The error message: "The method list(List<Generics.Base>) in the type Generics.C is not applicable for the arguments (List<Generics.Sub>)"
public class Generics {
class Base { }
class Sub extends Base{ }
interface I {
public void list( List<Base> list );
public void single( Base list );
}
class C implements I {
public void list( List<Base> b) { }
public void single( Base p) { }
}
void test() {
C c = new C();
c.single( new Sub() );
List<Sub> b = new ArrayList<Sub>();
c.list( b ); // error message as above
}
public static void main( String[] args) {
Generics g = new Generics();
g.test();
}
}
Is there any other way but declaring the list-methods argument as type <? extends Base>
?