I am trying to have a deep understanding on when a generic method is to be written versus a non-generic method. Both the Collection interface as well as the Collections helper class has the addAll()
method albeit with different signatures and the former one is not a generic method whereas the later one is a generic method:
The signature of addAll()
in Collection:
boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c);
The signature of addAll()
in Collections:
@SafeVarargs
public static <T> boolean addAll(Collection<? super T> c, T... elements){}
So as a general rule when is it appropriate to write a generic vs a non-generic method?
Edit: My understanding of the term generic method is that it will have a type parameter or comma separated list of type parameters in angle brackets before the return type of the the method. Correct me if the definition is not correct.