I suggest changing your "crazy structure" into a form you feel more comfortable with. Having a list of Objects inside another list of Objects, where the second list can contain either a long[2] or a String looks like your design could need some review.
I have no idea why you need the opening hours to be represented by both a String and a long[], but I guess it would do no harm, if you move them into separate classes that implement Serializable.
Something like this:
public class OpeningHours implements Serializable{
private interface OpeningHour{
public long[] getOpeningHourLongs();
public String getOpeningHourString();
}
public static final class LongArrayOpeningHour implements OpeningHour, Serializable{
private final long[] openingHour;
public LongArrayOpeningHour(long[] openingHour) {
super();
assert openingHour.length == 2;
this.openingHour = openingHour;
}
@Override
public long[] getOpeningHourLongs() {
return openingHour;
}
@Override
public String getOpeningHourString() {
return null; // ??
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return Arrays.toString(openingHour);
}
}
public static final class StringOpeningHour implements OpeningHour, Serializable{
private static final long serialVersionUID = -8424663833219027462L;
private final String openingHour;
public StringOpeningHour(String openingHour) {
super();
this.openingHour = openingHour;
}
@Override
public long[] getOpeningHourLongs() {
return null; // ??
}
@Override
public String getOpeningHourString() {
return openingHour;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return openingHour;
}
}
private final List<OpeningHour> openingHours;
public OpeningHours() {
this.openingHours = new ArrayList<>();
}
public void addOpeningHour(OpeningHour hour){
this.openingHours.add(hour);
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return openingHours.toString();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
OpeningHours openingHours = new OpeningHours();
openingHours.addOpeningHour(new StringOpeningHour("I am an opening hour based on a String value"));
openingHours.addOpeningHour(new LongArrayOpeningHour(new long[]{1,2}));
System.out.println("openingHours before serialization: " + openingHours );
// write OpeningHours
OutputStream fos = null;
String filename = ... // insert filename here
try {
fos = new FileOutputStream( filename );
ObjectOutputStream o = new ObjectOutputStream( fos );
o.writeObject(openingHours);
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println(e);
} finally {
if (fos != null) {
try {fos.close();} catch (IOException e1) {}
}
}
// read OpeningHours
InputStream fis = null;
try{
fis = new FileInputStream( filename );
ObjectInputStream o = new ObjectInputStream( fis );
openingHours = (OpeningHours) o.readObject();
System.out.println("openingHours after deserialization: " + openingHours );
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println( e );
} catch ( ClassNotFoundException e ) {
System.err.println( e );
}finally {
if (fis != null) {
try {fis.close();} catch (IOException e1) {}
}
}
}
}
I believe having separate classes for these structures will certainly improve your code readability and will help you maintain and understand your code better on the long run.