Raw types are a feature of generics in the Java language. A raw type is the reference type formed by using the name of a generic type without accompanying type arguments. A raw type is equivalent to the erasure of a generic type.
Raw types are a feature of generics in the java language. A raw type is the reference type formed by using the name of a generic type without accompanying type arguments:
// List<Foo> is a parameterized type
List<Foo> bar;
// List is a raw type
List baz;
A raw type is equivalent to the erasure of a generic type.
Raw types allow implicit unchecked conversions which compromise type safety:
List<Float> bar = new ArrayList<>();
// 'raw type' compiler warning
List baz = new ArrayList();
// 'unchecked call' compiler warning
baz.add("not a Float");
// 'unchecked conversion' compiler warning
bar.addAll(baz);
// ClassCastException is thrown at run time
Float foo = bar.get(0);
Their usage is officially discouraged in modern Java code.
See also: