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I'm not sure why this doesn't work in Java:

import java.util.Map;

public class FreqCounter<T,R> {
    private Map<T, Integer> hist;
    private R item;
    public FreqCounter (final R item_) {
        item = item_;
    }
    public T getMostFrequentElement() {
        T most_frequent_element = T();
        Integer highestcount = 0;
        for(T t : item) {
            Integer count = hist.get(t);
            if(count == null) {
                hist.put(t, 1);
            }
            else {
                hist.put(t, count + 1);
            }
            if(count + 1 > highestcount) {
                most_frequent_element = t;
                highestcount = count + 1;
            }
        }
        return most_frequent_element;
    }
}


class HelloWorld {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String s = "aaabbcccc";
        FreqCounter<Character, Integer> counter = new FreqCounter<Character, Integer>(s);
    }
}

Problem lines:

 1. T most_frequent_element = T();
 2. for(T t : item)
 3. FreqCounter<Character, Integer> counter = new FreqCounter<Character, Integer>(s);
  1. Cannot find symbol: method T()
  2. required: array or java.lang.Iterable, found: R
  3. Required java.lang.Integer Found: java.lang.String reason: actual argument java.lang.String cannot be converted to java.lang.Integer by method invocation conversion

What I was trying to do was make a class that could count how many times an element in an iterable container shows up. Originally I just wanted to make it to count characters in a string but I thought I could make it more general. I think some of this would work in C++?

Also, does FreqCounter<Character, Integer> counter = new FreqCounter<Character, Integer>(s); need to be "newed" as opposed to declared on the stack?

2
  • 1
    T most_frequent_element = T(); what are you trying to achieve in this line? Dec 13, 2013 at 7:49
  • Java generics do not work the same way as C++ templates. Multiple changes would need to be made to your code for it to compile, let alone make sense in Java Dec 13, 2013 at 7:54

1 Answer 1

2

T is a Generic type, not a real one, and one of the limitations of generics is that you cannot instantiate a new one (which is what I think you were trying to do here).

What you can do though is assign, call methods in, keep references too, duplicate references too, etc.

What you probably actually wanted to do was pull the set of Ts out of the keySet of the Map.

T t = null;
int count = 0;
for (Entry<T, Integer> e: hist.entrySet()) {
   if (e.getValue() > count) {
      count = e.getValue();
      t = e.getKey();
   }
}
return t;

Java Generics provide a lot of the same functionality that C++ templates do, but they work in quite a different way. Quite apart from anything else you only have one ArrayList class no matter how many different ways you instantiate one. The generics are used for compiler time type checking and then erased and are not present at all during run time.

1
  • ahh... C++ treats each templated class as a new class. Didn't know that this was not the case in Java. Makes sense now that I think about it.
    – stewart99
    Dec 13, 2013 at 8:39

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