I'm having some trouble understanding the following scenario. I have a "generified" interface that is implemented by an abstract class and a concrete class that extends the abstract class.
The problem is that all the methods in the abstract class returning parametrized lists have lost their type so I'm getting a compilation error telling me that it cannot convert from object to the original List type.
Could anyone provide some insight?.
In the end what I would like is to have the a getId and setId method on the abstract class having a return type of java.lang.object
or <T extends Object>
and the concrete classes implementing their return type to whatever they want.
Here is the code for my different objects :
A generic interface
public interface MyInterface<T>{
public T getId();
public void setId(T id);
}
An abstract class implementing the interface
public abstract class MyAbstractClass<T> implements MyInterface<T>{
private List<String> texts;
private List<Integer> notes;
public List<String> getTexts(){
return texts;
}
public List<Integer> getNotes(){
return notes;
}
}
A Concrete class implementing the abstract class
public class MyConcreteClass implements MyAbstractClass<Integer>{
private Integer id;
public Integer getId(){
return this.id;
}
public void setId(Integer id){
this.id = id;
}
}
Some other class :
public class SomeOtherClass{
public void process(List<T extends MyAbstractClass> myClassList){
// Compilation error ->
// Type mismatch: cannot convert from element type Object to String
for(MyAbstractClass myObj : myClassList){
System.out.println("object Id : " + myObj.getId());
// Compilation error ->
// Type mismatch: cannot convert from element type Object to String
for(String txt : myObj.getTexts()){
}
}
}
}
public void process(MyAbstractClass<Integer> myClass){
. Note the addition of <Integer> to the parameter type.