I stumbled upon this snippet:
public class ParamTest {
public static void printSum(int a, double b) {
System.out.println("In intDBL " + (a + b));
}
public static void printSum(long a, long b) {
System.out.println("In long " + (a + b));
}
public static void printSum(double a, long b) {
System.out.println("In doubleLONG " + (a + b));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
printSum(1, 2);
}
}
This will result in a compile error:
Error:(15, 9) java: reference to printSum is ambiguous both method printSum(int,double) in ParamTest and method printSum(long,long) in ParamTest match
How is this ambiguous? Shouldn't only the second parameter be promoted in this case since the first parameter is already an int? The first param need not be promoted in this case right?
The compilation succeeds if I update the code to add another method:
public static void printSum(int a, long b) {
System.out.println(String.format("%s, %s ", a, b));
}
Let me expand just to clarify. The code below results in ambiguity:
public class ParamTest {
public static void printSum(int a, double b) {
System.out.println("In intDBL " + (a + b));
}
public static void printSum(long a, long b) {
System.out.println("In long " + (a + b));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
printSum(1, 2);
}
}
Then this code below also results in ambiguity:
public class ParamTest {
public static void printSum(int a, double b) {
System.out.println("In intDBL " + (a + b));
}
public static void printSum(double a, long b) {
System.out.println("In doubleLONG " + (a + b));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
printSum(1, 2);
}
}
However this one does not result in ambiguity:
public class ParamTest {
public static void printSum(int a, double b) {
System.out.println("In intDBL " + (a + b));
}
public static void printSum(long a, double b) {
System.out.println("In longDBL " + (a + b));
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
printSum(1, 2);
}
}
Error:(15, 9) java: reference to printSum is ambiguous both method printSum(int,double) in ParamTest and method printSum(long,long) in ParamTest match
- it's not the method that is ambiguous, it's the call to the method that is ambiguous.