In the following example, if I have multiple types in the list it compiles ok, but if I have one element, it chooses a different type which is no longer assignable.
// compiles fine
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list = Arrays.asList(SoftReference.class, WeakReference.class);
// but take an element away and it no longer compiles.
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list2 = Arrays.asList(WeakReference.class);
// without giving the specific type desired.
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list3 = Arrays.<Class<? extends Reference>>asList(WeakReference.class);
I am sure there is a logical explaination for this, but it escapes me.
Error:Error:line (30)error: incompatible types
required: List<Class<? extends Reference>>
found: List<Class<WeakReference>>
Why does having two elements compile but one element does not?
BTW: It is hard to find a simple example, if you try
List<Class<? extends List>> list = Arrays.asList(ArrayList.class, LinkedList.class);
Error:Error:line (28)error: incompatible types
required: List<Class<? extends List>>
found: List<Class<? extends INT#1>>
where INT#1 is an intersection type:
INT#1 extends AbstractList,Cloneable,Serializable
This doesn't compile either (it won't even parse)
List<Class<? extends AbstractList & Cloneable & Serializable>> list = Arrays.asList(ArrayList.class, LinkedList.class);
Error:Error:line (30)error: > expected
Error:Error:line (30)error: ';' expected
but this compiles fine
static abstract class MyList<T> implements List<T> { }
List<Class<? extends List>> list =
Arrays.asList(ArrayList.class, LinkedList.class, MyList.class);
List<Class<? extends List>> list =
Arrays.<Class<? extends List>>asList(ArrayList.class, LinkedList.class);
EDIT: Based on Marko's example. In these four example, one doesn't compile, the rest produce the same list of the same type.
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list = new ArrayList<>();
list.add(SoftReference.class);
list.add(WeakReference.class);
list.add(PhantomReference.class);
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list = new ArrayList<>(
Arrays.asList(SoftReference.class));
list.add(WeakReference.class);
list.add(PhantomReference.class);
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list = new ArrayList<>(
Arrays.asList(SoftReference.class, WeakReference.class));
list.add(PhantomReference.class);
List<Class<? extends Reference>> list = new ArrayList<>(
Arrays.asList(SoftReference.class, WeakReference.class, PhantomReference.class));
Class<WeakReference>is-not-aClass<? extends WeakReference>so naturally you can't assign. The example does point out the weakness of the generic type system, though. – Marko Topolnik Dec 30 '12 at 16:17