The intent is that for any class X
that extends TaskCollection
, when a groupBy operation is performed, the collection used for the map values are also instances of class X
.
In that case, the closest you can get to that is something like the following:
class Task {}
class Assertion extends Task {}
abstract class TaskCollection<E extends Task, C extends TaskCollection<E, C>> extends HashSet<E> {
<K> Map<K, C> groupBy(Function<E, K> groupingFunction) {
return this.stream()
.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(
groupingFunction,
Collectors.toCollection(this.collectionSupplier())
));
}
protected abstract Supplier<C> collectionSupplier();
}
class AssertionCollection extends TaskCollection<Assertion, AssertionCollection> {
@Override
protected Supplier<AssertionCollection> collectionSupplier() {
return AssertionCollection::new;
}
}
Notice that the definition of TaskCollection
above does not quite stop subclasses of using another TaskCollection
class for their groupBy map values. For example this would also compile:
class AssertionCollectionOther extends TaskCollection<Assertion, AssertionCollectionOther> {...}
class AssertionCollection extends TaskCollection<Assertion, AssertionCollectionOther> {...}
Unfortunately it is not possible to impose such a constraint, at least for now, as you cannot make reference to the class that is being declared in the C type-parameter wildcard.
If you can assume that descendants have a parameter free constructor as the collection supplier you can provide a default implementation for
collectionSupplier
. The price you pay is the need to silence a "unchecked" warning (not a real problem) and that not compliant classes (not providing the parameter-free constructor) won't fail at compilation time but at run-time which is less ideal:
import java.util.function.*;
import java.util.*;
import java.util.stream.*;
class Task {}
class Assertion extends Task {}
class TaskCollection<E extends Task, C extends TaskCollection<E, C>> extends HashSet<E> {
<K> Map<K, C> groupBy(Function<E, K> groupingFunction) {
return this.stream()
.collect(Collectors.groupingBy(
groupingFunction,
Collectors.toCollection(this.collectionSupplier())
));
}
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
protected Supplier<C> collectionSupplier() {
return () -> {
try {
return (C) this.getClass().newInstance();
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new RuntimeException(String.format("class %s is not a proper TaskCollection", this.getClass()), ex);
}
};
}
}
class AssertionCollection extends TaskCollection<Assertion, AssertionCollection> {
// This override is not needed any longer although still could
// be included in order to produce a slightly faster
// customized implementation:
//@Override
//protected Supplier<AssertionCollection> collectionSupplier() {
// return AssertionCollection::new;
//}
}
If you declare collectionSupplier
as final
you would effectively force subclasses to always return instances of their own class with the caveat that a, then non-sense, declaration such as class AssertionCollection extends TaskCollection<Assertion, AssertionCollectionOther>
would still compile and produce run-time cast exceptions down the road.
TaskCollection
has aHashSet
makes better sense thanTaskCollection
is aHashSet
. The use ofHashSet
feels like an implementation detail. Do you need to inherit fromHashSet
?