Since generics are only checked during compile time with Java 5, can they avoid ClassCastExceptions in all situations?
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First of all, you should make sure that your code compiles without unckeched warnings. That is a good indicator. To understand why, I suggest you take a look at the sample chapter for generics from Effective Java. Second of all, generics can't guard you from code such as:
Third of all, if you're in some way or another messing with Class Loaders, you might get strange
So the answer is no, you can't get rid of |
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The "cast-iron" guarantee that Java 5 generics provides is that you will never see a ClassCastException from the casts inserted by the compiler provided that compilation produced no "unchecked" warnings. In real life, you often can't avoid unchecked warnings if your code uses legacy (non-generified) libraries. Then the compiler-generated casts can throw ClassCastException, and it's your job to prevent this by ensuring that the values returned by library code are well-typed for your declarations. Otherwise the situation is unchanged. Outside of generics, if you cast to an incompatible type you'll get a ClassCastException the same way as you always did. (A good reference for this and other generics questions is Java Generics and Collections.) |
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No. Using Java 5.0 and generics type doesn't make you ClassCastException-proof. |
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Nope. generics only save you from compile time errors, not runtime exceptions. |
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