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Is it possible to cast an object in Java to a combined generic type?

I have a method like:

public static <T extends Foo & Bar> void doSomething(T object) {
    //do stuff
}

Calling this method is no problem if I have a class that implements both interfaces (Foo & Bar).

The problem is when I need to call this method the object I need to pass to it is received as java.lang.Object and I need to cast it to make the compiler happy. But I can't figure out how to make this cast.

edit:

The problem lies in a function like this:

public void problemFunction (Object o) {
  if ( o instanceof Foo && o instanceof Bar) {
      doSomething((Problematic cast) o);
  }
}

}

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3 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

Unfortunately, there is no legal cast that you can make to satisfy this situation. There must be a single type known to implement all of the interfaces that you need as bounds, so that you can cast to it. The might be a type you create for the purpose, or some existing type.

interface Baz extends Foo, Bar { }

public void caller(Object w) {
  doSomething((Baz) w);
}

If other types are known, like Baz, to meet the bounds, you could test for those types, and have a branch in your caller that calls doSomething with a cast to those types. It's not pretty.

You could also use delegation, creating your own class Baz that meets the bounds required by doSomething. Then wrap the object you are passed in an instance of your Baz class, and pass that wrapper to doSomething.

private static class FooBarAdapter implements Foo, Bar {
  private final Object adaptee;
  FooBarAdapter(Object o) {
    adaptee = (Foo) (Bar) o;
  }
  public int flip() { return ((Foo) adaptee).flip(); }
  public void flop(int x) { ((Foo) adaptee).flop(x); }
  public void blort() { ((Bar) adaptee).blort(); }
}

public void problemFunction (Object o) {
  doSomething(new FooBarAdapter(o));
}
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vote up 1 vote down
public static <T extends Foo & Bar> void doSomething(T object)

This seems to denote that you would be performing more than one operation on the object in question.

I would argue that if the desired operations you are performing on the object are distinct enough to be seperated across interfaces, then they are distinct enough to deserve their own methods.

It is likely that you could restructure this code to call seperate methods to perform the desired operation. This may end up making the entire operation more clear from the client's perspective.

Instead of:

public void problemFunction (Object o) {
  if (o instanceof Foo && o instanceof Bar) {
      doSomething((Problematic cast) o);
  }
}

It becomes:

public void problemFunction(Object o) {
  if (o instanceof Foo && o instanceof Bar) {
      fooifySomething((Foo) o);
      baratizeSomething((Bar) o);
  }
}
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vote up -1 vote down

As a workaround, you could define another interface FooBar that extends Foo and Bar and have your class implement that. It doesn't even have to be a top-level interface - you can declare it private if you don't want to clutter up or retrofit the rest of your code:

private interface FooBar extends Foo, Bar {}
public void problemFunction (Object o) {
  if ( o instanceof Foo && o instanceof Bar) {
      doSomething((FooBar) o);
  }
}
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