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i need to see my hashMap keys and values in order to check if it s working properly.but im getting an error for the below lines:

Iterator iterator =  myHashMap.keySet().iterator();
    Flows flows = new Flows();
    while(iterator.hasNext()){
        Object key = iterator.next();
        Object value = myHashMap.get(key); // <--
        //here is the error.  suspicious call to java.util.Map.get 
        //expected type Flows, actual type object

        System.out.println(key+" "+value);
    }

my keys are type of Flows and my values are FlowsStatics.

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2 Answers 2

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Have you declared myHashMap using a Generic type: for example HashMap<Flows, FlowStatics> ?

If so, you should use Generics throughout:

Iterator<Flows> iterator =  myHashMap.keySet().iterator();
while(iterator.hasNext()){
    Flows key = iterator.next();
    FlowStatics value = myHashMap.get(key); // <--

or even:

for(Flows key: myHashMap.keySet().iterator()){
    FlowStatics value = myHashMap.get(key);

or even:

for(Map.Entry<Flows, FlowStatics> entry: myHashMap.entrySet().iterator()){
    Flows key = entry.getKey();
    FlowStatics value = entry.getValue();
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Your iterator will automatically return objects of class Flows if you declare your Map as Map<Flows, FlowsStatics>, which you really should:

while(iterator.hasNext()){
    Flows key = iterator.next();
    FlowsStatics value = myHashMap.get(key);
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  • Or typecast to "Flow" and "FlowStatics" if you haven't used generics.
    – pavanlimo
    Aug 14, 2010 at 10:05
  • yes this is my map: "final HashMap<Flows, FlowStatics> myHashMap = new HashMap<Flows, FlowStatics>();"
    – Red Lion
    Aug 14, 2010 at 10:05
  • You also need to declare the Iterator with a Type parameter in order for your answer to compile! Aug 14, 2010 at 10:15

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