Java has generics and C++ provides a very strong programming model with template
s.
So then, what is the difference between C++ and Java generics?
13 Answers
There is a big difference between them. In C++ you don't have to specify a class or an interface for the generic type. That's why you can create truly generic functions and classes, with the caveat of a looser typing.
template <typename T> T sum(T a, T b) { return a + b; }
The method above adds two objects of the same type, and can be used for any type T that has the "+" operator available.
In Java you have to specify a type if you want to call methods on the objects passed, something like:
<T extends Something> T sum(T a, T b) { return a.add ( b ); }
In C++ generic functions/classes can only be defined in headers, since the compiler generates different functions for different types (that it's invoked with). So the compilation is slower. In Java the compilation doesn't have a major penalty, but Java uses a technique called "erasure" where the generic type is erased at runtime, so at runtime Java is actually calling ...
Something sum(Something a, Something b) { return a.add ( b ); }
Nevertheless, Java's generics help with type-safety.
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29He is perfectly correct that it is just an elaborate syntactic sugar. Aug 4, 2011 at 23:56
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45It's not purely syntactic sugar. The compiler uses this information for checking types. Even though the information isn't available at runtime I wouldn't call something the compiled uses simply "syntactic sugar". If you would call it that, well then C is just syntactic sugar for assembly, and that's just syntactic sugar for machine code :)– dtechFeb 3, 2013 at 22:17
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52
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8You missed a major point of difference, what you can use to instantiate a generic. In c++ it is possible to use template <int N> and get a different result for any number used to instantiate it. It is used for compile time meta progaming. Like the answer in: stackoverflow.com/questions/189172/c-templates-turing-complete Aug 24, 2013 at 16:32
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2You do not have to 'specify a type', in the form of either
extends
orsuper
. Answer is incorrect, Apr 26, 2016 at 10:06
Java Generics are massively different to C++ templates.
Basically in C++ templates are basically a glorified preprocessor/macro set (Note: since some people seem unable to comprehend an analogy, I'm not saying template processing is a macro). In Java they are basically syntactic sugar to minimize boilerplate casting of Objects. Here is a pretty decent introduction to C++ templates vs Java generics.
To elaborate on this point: when you use a C++ template, you're basically creating another copy of the code, just as if you used a #define
macro. This allows you to do things like have int
parameters in template definitions that determine sizes of arrays and such.
Java doesn't work like that. In Java all objects extent from java.lang.Object so, pre-Generics, you'd write code like this:
public class PhoneNumbers {
private Map phoneNumbers = new HashMap();
public String getPhoneNumber(String name) {
return (String) phoneNumbers.get(name);
}
}
because all the Java collection types used Object as their base type so you could put anything in them. Java 5 rolls around and adds generics so you can do things like:
public class PhoneNumbers {
private Map<String, String> phoneNumbers = new HashMap<String, String>();
public String getPhoneNumber(String name) {
return phoneNumbers.get(name);
}
}
And that's all Java Generics are: wrappers for casting objects. That's because Java Generics aren't refined. They use type erasure. This decision was made because Java Generics came along so late in the piece that they didn't want to break backward compatibility (a Map<String, String>
is usable whenever a Map
is called for). Compare this to .Net/C# where type erasure isn't used, which leads to all sorts of differences (e.g. you can use primitive types and IEnumerable
and IEnumerable<T>
bear no relation to each other).
And a class using generics compiled with a Java 5+ compiler is usable on JDK 1.4 (assuming it doesn't use any other features or classes that require Java 5+).
That's why Java Generics are called syntactic sugar.
But this decision on how to do generics has profound effects so much so that the (superb) Java Generics FAQ has sprung up to answer the many, many questions people have about Java Generics.
C++ templates have a number of features that Java Generics don't:
Use of primitive type arguments.
For example:
template<class T, int i> class Matrix { int T[i][i]; ... }
Java does not allow the use of primitive type arguments in generics.
Use of default type arguments, which is one feature I miss in Java but there are backwards compatibility reasons for this;
Java allows bounding of arguments.
For example:
public class ObservableList<T extends List> { ... }
It really does need to be stressed that template invocations with different arguments really are different types. They don't even share static members. In Java this is not the case.
Aside from the differences with generics, for completeness, here is a basic comparison of C++ and Java (and another one).
And I can also suggest Thinking in Java. As a C++ programmer a lot of the concepts like objects will be second nature already but there are subtle differences so it can be worthwhile to have an introductory text even if you skim parts.
A lot of what you'll learn when learning Java is all the libraries (both standard--what comes in the JDK--and nonstandard, which includes commonly used things like Spring). Java syntax is more verbose than C++ syntax and doesn't have a lot of C++ features (e.g. operator overloading, multiple inheritance, the destructor mechanism, etc) but that doesn't strictly make it a subset of C++ either.
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1They are not equivalent in concept. The best example being the curiously recurring template pattern. The second-best being policy-oriented design. The third-best being the fact that C++ allows integral numbers to be passed in the angle brackets (myArray<5>). Jan 31, 2009 at 8:40
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1No, they're not equivalent in concept. There is some overlap in the concept, but not much. Both allow you to create List<T>, but that's about as far as it goes. C++ templates go a lot further.– jalfJan 31, 2009 at 18:56
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5Important to note that the type erasure issue means more than just backwards compatability for
Map map = new HashMap<String, String>
. It means you can deploy new code on an old JVM and it will run due to the similarities in bytecode. Jan 31, 2009 at 18:57 -
1You'll note I said "basically a glorified preprocessor/macro". It was an analogy because each template declaration will create more code (as opposed to Java/C#).– cletusJan 31, 2009 at 23:03
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4Template code is very different than copy-and-paste. If you think in terms of macro expansion, sooner or later you'll be hit by subtle bugs such as this one: womble.decadentplace.org.uk/c++/… Feb 2, 2009 at 2:20
C++ has templates. Java has generics, which look kinda sorta like C++ templates, but they're very, very different.
Templates work, as the name implies, by providing the compiler with a (wait for it...) template that it can use to generate type-safe code by filling in the template parameters.
Generics, as I understand them, work the other way around: the type parameters are used by the compiler to verify that the code using them is type-safe, but the resulting code is generated without types at all.
Think of C++ templates as a really good macro system, and Java generics as a tool for automatically generating typecasts.
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5This is a pretty good, concise explanation. One tweak I'd be tempted to make is that Java generics is a tool for automatically generating typecasts that are guaranteed to be safe (with some conditions). In some ways they're related to C++'s
const
. An object in C++ won't be modified through aconst
pointer unless theconst
-ness is casted away. Likewise, the implicit casts created by generic types in Java are guaranteed to be "safe" unless the type parameters are manually casted away somewhere in the code. Mar 1, 2010 at 20:13 -
'Think of C++ templates as a really good macro system' hugely undermines the power of C++ templates– NiteshFeb 23, 2022 at 10:07
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Hugely? I can't agree. The cases where templates are more useful than really good macros are few and far between. Aug 31, 2022 at 13:39
Another feature that C++ templates have that Java generics don't is specialization. That allows you to have a different implementation for specific types. So you can, for example, have a highly optimized version for an int, while still having a generic version for the rest of the types. Or you can have different versions for pointer and non-pointer types. This comes in handy if you want to operate on the dereferenced object when handed a pointer.
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1+1 template specialization is incredibly important for compile-time metaprogramming - this difference in itself makes java generics that much less potent Jun 15, 2009 at 18:38
There is a great explanation of this topic in Java Generics and Collections By Maurice Naftalin, Philip Wadler. I highly recommend this book. To quote:
Generics in Java resemble templates in C++. ... The syntax is deliberately similar and the semantics are deliberately different. ... Semantically, Java generics are defined by erasure, where as C++ templates are defined by expansion.
Please read the full explanation here.
(source: oreilly.com)
Basically, AFAIK, C++ templates create a copy of the code for each type, while Java generics use exactly the same code.
Yes, you can say that C++ template is equivalent to Java generic concept ( although more properly would be to say Java generics are equivalent to C++ in concept )
If you are familiar with C++'s template mechanism, you might think that generics are similar, but the similarity is superficial. Generics do not generate a new class for each specialization, nor do they permit “template metaprogramming.”
from: Java Generics
Java (and C#) generics seem to be a simple run-time type substitution mechanism.
C++ templates are a compile-time construct which give you a way to modify the language to suit your needs. They are actually a purely-functional language that the compiler executes during a compile.
The answer below is from the book Cracking The Coding Interview Solutions to Chapter 13, which I think is very good.
The implementation of Java generics is rooted in an idea of"type erasure:'This technique eliminates the parameterized types when source code is translated to the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) bytecode. For example, suppose you have the Java code below:
Vector<String> vector = new Vector<String>();
vector.add(new String("hello"));
String str = vector.get(0);
During compilation, this code is re-written into:
Vector vector = new Vector();
vector.add(new String("hello"));
String str = (String) vector.get(0);
The use of Java generics didn't really change much about our capabilities; it just made things a bit prettier. For this reason, Java generics are sometimes called"syntactic sugar:'.
This is quite different from C++. In C++, templates are essentially a glorified macro set, with the compiler creating a new copy of the template code for each type. Proof of this is in the fact that an instance of MyClass will not share a static variable withMyClass. Tow instances of MyClass, however, will share a static variable.
/*** MyClass.h ***/
template<class T> class MyClass {
public:
static int val;
MyClass(int v) { val v;}
};
/*** MyClass.cpp ***/
template<typename T>
int MyClass<T>::bar;
template class MyClass<Foo>;
template class MyClass<Bar>;
/*** main.cpp ***/
MyClass<Foo> * fool
MyClass<Foo> * foo2
MyClass<Bar> * barl
MyClass<Bar> * bar2
new MyClass<Foo>(10);
new MyClass<Foo>(15);
new MyClass<Bar>(20);
new MyClass<Bar>(35);
int fl fool->val; // will equal 15
int f2 foo2->val; // will equal 15
int bl barl->val; // will equal 35
int b2 bar2->val; // will equal 35
In Java, static variables are shared across instances of MyClass, regardless of the different type parameters.
Java generics and C ++ templates have a number of other differences. These include:
- C++ templates can use primitive types, like int. Java cannot and must instead use Integer.
- In Java, you can restrict the template's type parameters to be of a certain type. For instance, you might use generics to implement a CardDeck and specify that the type parameter must extend from CardGame.
- In C++, the type parameter can be instantiated, whereas Java does not support this.
- In Java, the type parameter (i.e., the Foo in MyClass) cannot be used for static methods and variables, since these would be shared between MyClass and MyClass. In C++, these classes are different, so the type parameter can be used for static methods and variables.
- In Java, all instances of MyClass, regardless of their type parameters, are the same type. The type parameters are erased at runtime. In C++, instances with different type parameters are different types.
Another advantage of C++ templates is specialization.
template <typename T> T sum(T a, T b) { return a + b; }
template <typename T> T sum(T* a, T* b) { return (*a) + (*b); }
Special sum(const Special& a, const Special& b) { return a.plus(b); }
Now, if you call sum with pointers, the second method will be called, if you call sum with non-pointer objects the first method will be called, and if you call sum
with Special
objects, the third will be called. I don't think that this is possible with Java.
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2May be because Java doesn't have pointers..!! can you explain with a better example? Aug 22, 2016 at 2:41
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@BhavukMathur I think Keithb meant you can overload methods using templates. Sort of a "generic" overload. Pointers were just a sample type. Feb 17, 2022 at 15:33
I will sum it up in a single sentence: templates create new types, generics restricts existing types.
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3Your explanation is so brief! And makes perfectly sense for people that understand the topic well. But for people who don't understand it yet, it doesn't help very much. (Which is the case of anybody asking question on SO, got it?)– JakubNov 3, 2016 at 15:08
@Keith:
That code is actually wrong and apart from the smaller glitches (template
omitted, specialization syntax looks differently), partial specialization doesn't work on function templates, only on class templates. The code would however work without partial template specialization, instead using plain old overloading:
template <typename T> T sum(T a, T b) { return a + b; }
template <typename T> T sum(T* a, T* b) { return (*a) + (*b); }
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2
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3@Laurence: for once, because it was posted long before comments were implemented on Stack Overflow. For another, because it’s not only a comment – it’s also an answer to the question: something like the above code isn’t possible in Java. Mar 1, 2010 at 20:30
Templates are nothing but a macro system. Syntax sugar. They are fully expanded before actual compilation (or, at least, compilers behave as if it were the case).
Example:
Let's say we want two functions. One function takes two sequences (list, arrays, vectors, whatever goes) of numbers, and returns their inner product. Another function takes a length, generates two sequences of that length, passes them to the first function, and returns it's result. The catch is that we might make a mistake in the second function, so that these two functions aren't really of the same length. We need the compiler to warn us in this case. Not when the program is running, but when it's compiling.
In Java you can do something like this:
import java.io.*;
interface ScalarProduct<A> {
public Integer scalarProduct(A second);
}
class Nil implements ScalarProduct<Nil>{
Nil(){}
public Integer scalarProduct(Nil second) {
return 0;
}
}
class Cons<A implements ScalarProduct<A>> implements ScalarProduct<Cons<A>>{
public Integer value;
public A tail;
Cons(Integer _value, A _tail) {
value = _value;
tail = _tail;
}
public Integer scalarProduct(Cons<A> second){
return value * second.value + tail.scalarProduct(second.tail);
}
}
class _Test{
public static Integer main(Integer n){
return _main(n, 0, new Nil(), new Nil());
}
public static <A implements ScalarProduct<A>>
Integer _main(Integer n, Integer i, A first, A second){
if (n == 0) {
return first.scalarProduct(second);
} else {
return _main(n-1, i+1,
new Cons<A>(2*i+1,first), new Cons<A>(i*i, second));
//the following line won't compile, it produces an error:
//return _main(n-1, i+1, first, new Cons<A>(i*i, second));
}
}
}
public class Test{
public static void main(String [] args){
System.out.print("Enter a number: ");
try {
BufferedReader is =
new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
String line = is.readLine();
Integer val = Integer.parseInt(line);
System.out.println(_Test.main(val));
} catch (NumberFormatException ex) {
System.err.println("Not a valid number");
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println("Unexpected IO ERROR");
}
}
}
In C# you can write almost the same thing. Try to rewrite it in C++, and it won't compile, complaining about infinite expansion of templates.
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Okay, this is 3 years old but I am responding anyways. I don't see your point. The whole reason Java generates an Error for that commented Line is because you would be calling a function that expects two A's with different Arguments (A and Cons<A>) and this is really basic and also happens when no generics are involved. C++ does that too. Apart from that, this code gave me cancer because it is really horrible. However, you would still do it like that in C++, you have to so modifications of course because C++ is not Java, but that is not a diaadvantage of C++'s Templates. Dec 4, 2016 at 15:12
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@clocktown no, you CAN'T do that in C++. No amount of modifications would allow that. And that IS a disadvantage of C++ templates.– MigMitDec 5, 2016 at 11:06
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What your Code was supposed to do - warn about different length - it doesnt do. In your commented out example it only produces errors because of non matching Arguments. That Works in C++, too. You can Type Code that is semantically equivalent and way better than this mess in C++ and in Java. Dec 6, 2016 at 11:30
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It does. Arguments are not matching exactly because lengths are different. You can't do that in C++.– MigMitDec 6, 2016 at 13:04
I would like to quote askanydifference here:
The main difference between C++ and Java lies in their dependency on the platform. While, C++ is platform dependent language, Java is platform independent language.
The above statement is the reason why C++ is able to provide true generic types. While Java does have strict checking and hence they don't allow using generics the way C++ allows it.