I'm a bit confused about how Java generics handle inheritance / polymorphism.
Assume the following hierarchy -
Animal (Parent)
Dog - Cat (Children)
So suppose I have a method doSomething(List<Animal> animals)
. By all the rules of inheritance and polymorphism, I would assume that a List<Dog>
is a List<Animal>
and a List<Cat>
is a List<Animal>
- and so either one could be passed to this method. Not so. If I want to achieve this behavior, I have to explicitly tell the method to accept a list of any subclass of Animal by saying doSomething(List<? extends Animal> animals)
.
I understand that this is Java's behavior. My question is why? Why is polymorphism generally implicit, but when it comes to generics it must be specified?
No, a List<Dog>
is not a List<Animal>
. Consider what you can do with a List<Animal>
- you can add any animal to it... including a cat. Now, can you logically add a cat to a litter of puppies? Absolutely not.
// Illegal code - because otherwise life would be Bad
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>(); // ArrayList implements List
List<Animal> animals = dogs; // Awooga awooga
animals.add(new Cat());
Dog dog = dogs.get(0); // This should be safe, right?
Suddenly you have a very confused cat.
Now, you can't add a Cat
to a List<? extends Animal>
because you don't know it's a List<Cat>
. You can retrieve a value and know that it will be an Animal
, but you can't add arbitrary animals. The reverse is true for List<? super Animal>
- in that case you can add an Animal
to it safely, but you don't know anything about what might be retrieved from it, because it could be a List<Object>
.
What you are looking for is called covariant type parameters. This means that if one type of object can be substituted for another in a method (for instance, Animal
can be replaced with Dog
), the same applies to expressions using those objects (so List<Animal>
could be replaced with List<Dog>
). The problem is that covariance is not safe for mutable lists in general. Suppose you have a List<Dog>
, and it is being used as a List<Animal>
. What happens when you try to add a Cat to this List<Animal>
which is really a List<Dog>
? Automatically allowing type parameters to be covariant breaks the type system.
It would be useful to add syntax to allow type parameters to be specified as covariant, which avoids the ? extends Foo
in method declarations, but that does add additional complexity.
The reason a List<Dog>
is not a List<Animal>
, is that, for example, you can insert a Cat
into a List<Animal>
, but not into a List<Dog>
... you can use wildcards to make generics more extensible where possible; for example, reading from a List<Dog>
is the similar to reading from a List<Animal>
-- but not writing.
The Generics in the Java Language and the Section on Generics from the Java Tutorials have a very good, in-depth explanation as to why some things are or are not polymorphic or permitted with generics.
A point I think should be added to what other answers mention is that while
List<Dog>
isn't-aList<Animal>
in Java
it is also true that
A list of dogs is-a list of animals in English (under a reasonable interpretation)
The way the OP's intuition works - which is completely valid of course - is the latter sentence. However, if we apply this intuition we get a language that is not Java-esque in its type system: Suppose our language does allow adding a cat to our list of dogs. What would that mean? It would mean that the list ceases to be a list of dogs, and remains merely a list of animals. And a list of mammals, and a list of quadrapeds.
To put it another way: A List<Dog>
in Java does not mean "a list of dogs" in English, it means "a list of dogs and nothing other than dogs".
More generally, OP's intuition lends itself towards a language in which operations on objects can change their type, or rather, an object's type(s) is a (dynamic) function of its value.
I would say the whole point of Generics is that it doesn't allow that. Consider the situation with arrays, which do allow that type of covariance:
Object[] objects = new String[10];
objects[0] = Boolean.FALSE;
That code compiles fine, but throws a runtime error (java.lang.ArrayStoreException: java.lang.Boolean
in the second line). It is not typesafe. The point of Generics is to add the compile time type safety, otherwise you could just stick with a plain class without generics.
Now there are times where you need to be more flexible and that is what the ? super Class
and ? extends Class
are for. The former is when you need to insert into a type Collection
(for example), and the latter is for when you need to read from it, in a type safe manner. But the only way to do both at the same time is to have a specific type.
To understand the problem it's useful to make comparison to arrays.
List<Dog>
is not subclass of List<Animal>
.
But Dog[]
is subclass of Animal[]
.
Arrays are reifiable and covariant.
Reifiable means their type information is fully available at runtime.
Therefore arrays provide runtime type safety but not compile-time type safety.
// All compiles but throws ArrayStoreException at runtime at last line
Dog[] dogs = new Dog[10];
Animal[] animals = dogs; // compiles
animals[0] = new Cat(); // throws ArrayStoreException at runtime
It's vice versa for generics:
Generics are erased and invariant.
Therefore generics can't provide runtime type safety, but they provide compile-time type safety.
In the code below if generics were covariant it will be possible to make heap pollution at line 3.
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<>();
List<Animal> animals = dogs; // compile-time error, otherwise heap pollution
animals.add(new Cat());
The answers given here didn't fully convince me. So instead, I make another example.
public void passOn(Consumer<Animal> consumer, Supplier<Animal> supplier) {
consumer.accept(supplier.get());
}
sounds fine, doesn't it? But you can only pass Consumer
s and Supplier
s for Animal
s. If you have a Mammal
consumer, but a Duck
supplier, they should not fit although both are animals. In order to disallow this, additional restrictions have been added.
Instead of the above, we have to define relationships between the types we use.
E. g.,
public <A extends Animal> void passOn(Consumer<A> consumer, Supplier<? extends A> supplier) {
consumer.accept(supplier.get());
}
makes sure that we can only use a supplier which provides us the right type of object for the consumer.
OTOH, we could as well do
public <A extends Animal> void passOn(Consumer<? super A> consumer, Supplier<A> supplier) {
consumer.accept(supplier.get());
}
where we go the other way: we define the type of the Supplier
and restrict that it can be put into the Consumer
.
We even can do
public <A extends Animal> void passOn(Consumer<? super A> consumer, Supplier<? extends A> supplier) {
consumer.accept(supplier.get());
}
where, having the intuitive relations Life
-> Animal
-> Mammal
-> Dog
, Cat
etc., we could even put a Mammal
into a Life
consumer, but not a String
into a Life
consumer.
The basis logic for such behavior is that Generics
follow a mechanism of type erasure. So at run time you have no way if identifying the type of collection
unlike arrays
where there is no such erasure process. So coming back to your question...
So suppose there is a method as given below:
add(List<Animal>){
//You can add List<Dog or List<Cat> and this will compile as per rules of polymorphism
}
Now if java allows caller to add List of type Animal to this method then you might add wrong thing into collection and at run time too it will run due to type erasure. While in case of arrays you will get a run time exception for such scenarios...
Thus in essence this behavior is implemented so that one cannot add wrong thing into collection. Now I believe type erasure exists so as to give compatibility with legacy java without generics....
Others have done a decent job of explaining why you cannot just cast a list of descendant to list of superclass.
However, many people visit this question looking for a solution.
So, the solution to this problem since Java version 10 is as follows:
(Note: S = superclass)
List<S> supers = List.copyOf( descendants );
This function will do a cast if it is perfectly safe to do so, or a copy if a cast would not be safe.
For an in-depth explanation (which takes into consideration the potential pitfalls mentioned by other answers here) see related question and my 2022 answer to it: https://stackoverflow.com/a/72195980/773113
Subtyping is invariant for parameterized types. Even tough the class Dog
is a subtype of Animal
, the parameterized type List<Dog>
is not a subtype of List<Animal>
. In contrast, covariant subtyping is used by arrays, so the array
type Dog[]
is a subtype of Animal[]
.
Invariant subtyping ensures that the type constraints enforced by Java are not violated. Consider the following code given by @Jon Skeet:
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>(1);
List<Animal> animals = dogs;
animals.add(new Cat()); // compile-time error
Dog dog = dogs.get(0);
As stated by @Jon Skeet, this code is illegal, because otherwise it would violate the type constraints by returning a cat when a dog expected.
It is instructive to compare the above to analogous code for arrays.
Dog[] dogs = new Dog[1];
Object[] animals = dogs;
animals[0] = new Cat(); // run-time error
Dog dog = dogs[0];
The code is legal. However, throws an array store exception. An array carries its type at run-time this way JVM can enforce type safety of covariant subtyping.
To understand this further let's look at the bytecode generated by javap
of the class below:
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class Demonstration {
public void normal() {
List normal = new ArrayList(1);
normal.add("lorem ipsum");
}
public void parameterized() {
List<String> parameterized = new ArrayList<>(1);
parameterized.add("lorem ipsum");
}
}
Using the command javap -c Demonstration
, this shows the following Java bytecode:
Compiled from "Demonstration.java"
public class Demonstration {
public Demonstration();
Code:
0: aload_0
1: invokespecial #1 // Method java/lang/Object."<init>":()V
4: return
public void normal();
Code:
0: new #2 // class java/util/ArrayList
3: dup
4: iconst_1
5: invokespecial #3 // Method java/util/ArrayList."<init>":(I)V
8: astore_1
9: aload_1
10: ldc #4 // String lorem ipsum
12: invokeinterface #5, 2 // InterfaceMethod java/util/List.add:(Ljava/lang/Object;)Z
17: pop
18: return
public void parameterized();
Code:
0: new #2 // class java/util/ArrayList
3: dup
4: iconst_1
5: invokespecial #3 // Method java/util/ArrayList."<init>":(I)V
8: astore_1
9: aload_1
10: ldc #4 // String lorem ipsum
12: invokeinterface #5, 2 // InterfaceMethod java/util/List.add:(Ljava/lang/Object;)Z
17: pop
18: return
}
Observe that the translated code of method bodies are identical. Compiler replaced each parameterized type by its erasure. This property is crucial meaning that it did not break backwards compatibility.
In conclusion, run-time safety is not possible for parameterized types, since compiler replaces each parameterized type by its erasure. This makes parameterized types are nothing more than syntactic sugar.
If you are sure that the list items are subclasses of that given super type, you can cast the list using this approach:
(List<Animal>) (List<?>) dogs
This is usefull when you want to pass the list inside of a constructor or iterate over it.
The answer as well as other answers are correct. I am going to add to those answers with a solution that I think will be helpful. I think this comes up often in programming. One thing to note is that for Collections (Lists, Sets, etc.) the main issue is adding to the Collection. That is where things break down. Even removing is OK.
In most cases, we can use Collection<? extends T>
rather then Collection<T>
and that should be the first choice. However, I am finding cases where it is not easy to do that. It is up for debate as to whether that is always the best thing to do. I am presenting here a class DownCastCollection that can take convert a Collection<? extends T>
to a Collection<T>
(we can define similar classes for List, Set, NavigableSet,..) to be used when using the standard approach is very inconvenient. Below is an example of how to use it (we could also use Collection<? extends Object>
in this case, but I am keeping it simple to illustrate using DownCastCollection.
/**Could use Collection<? extends Object> and that is the better choice.
* But I am doing this to illustrate how to use DownCastCollection. **/
public static void print(Collection<Object> col){
for(Object obj : col){
System.out.println(obj);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args){
ArrayList<String> list = new ArrayList<>();
list.addAll(Arrays.asList("a","b","c"));
print(new DownCastCollection<Object>(list));
}
Now the class:
import java.util.AbstractCollection;
import java.util.Collection;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.NoSuchElementException;
public class DownCastCollection<E> extends AbstractCollection<E> implements Collection<E> {
private Collection<? extends E> delegate;
public DownCastCollection(Collection<? extends E> delegate) {
super();
this.delegate = delegate;
}
@Override
public int size() {
return delegate ==null ? 0 : delegate.size();
}
@Override
public boolean isEmpty() {
return delegate==null || delegate.isEmpty();
}
@Override
public boolean contains(Object o) {
if(isEmpty()) return false;
return delegate.contains(o);
}
private class MyIterator implements Iterator<E>{
Iterator<? extends E> delegateIterator;
protected MyIterator() {
super();
this.delegateIterator = delegate == null ? null :delegate.iterator();
}
@Override
public boolean hasNext() {
return delegateIterator != null && delegateIterator.hasNext();
}
@Override
public E next() {
if(!hasNext()) throw new NoSuchElementException("The iterator is empty");
return delegateIterator.next();
}
@Override
public void remove() {
delegateIterator.remove();
}
}
@Override
public Iterator<E> iterator() {
return new MyIterator();
}
@Override
public boolean add(E e) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
@Override
public boolean remove(Object o) {
if(delegate == null) return false;
return delegate.remove(o);
}
@Override
public boolean containsAll(Collection<?> c) {
if(delegate==null) return false;
return delegate.containsAll(c);
}
@Override
public boolean addAll(Collection<? extends E> c) {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
@Override
public boolean removeAll(Collection<?> c) {
if(delegate == null) return false;
return delegate.removeAll(c);
}
@Override
public boolean retainAll(Collection<?> c) {
if(delegate == null) return false;
return delegate.retainAll(c);
}
@Override
public void clear() {
if(delegate == null) return;
delegate.clear();
}
}
The issue has been correctly identified as related to variance but the details are not correct. A purely functional list is a covariant data functor, which means if a type Sub is a subtype of Super, then a list of Sub is definitely a subtype of a list of Super.
However mutability of a list is not the basic problem here. The problem is mutability in general. The problem is well known, and is called the Covariance Problem, it was first identified I think by Castagna, and it completely and utterly destroys object orientation as a general paradigm. It is based on previously established variance rules established by Cardelli and Reynolds.
Somewhat oversimplifying, lets consider assignment of an object B of type T to an object A of type T as a mutation. This is without loss of generality: a mutation of A can be written A = f (A) where f: T -> T. The problem, of course, is that whilst functions are covariant in their codomain, they're contravariant in their domain, but with assignments the domain and codomain are the same, so assignment is invariant!
It follows, generalising, that subtypes cannot be mutated. But with object orientation mutation is fundamental, hence object orientation is intrinsically flawed.
Here's a simple example: in a purely functional setting a symmetric matrix is clearly a matrix, it is a subtype, no problem. Now lets add to matrix the ability to set a single element at coordinates (x,y) with the rule no other element changes. Now symmetric matrix is no longer a subtype, if you change (x,y) you have also changed (y,x). The functional operation is delta: Sym -> Mat, if you change one element of a symmetric matrix you get a general non-symmetric matrix back. Therefore if you included a "change one element" method in Mat, Sym is not a subtype. In fact .. there are almost certainly NO proper subtypes.
To put all this in easier terms: if you have a general data type with a wide range of mutators which leverage its generality you can be certain any proper subtype cannot possibly support all those mutations: if it could, it would be just as general as the supertype, contrary to the specification of "proper" subtype.
The fact Java prevents subtyping mutable lists fails to address the real issue: why are you using object oriented rubbish like Java when it was discredited several decades ago??
In any case there's a reasonable discussion here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covariance_and_contravariance_(computer_science)
Lets take the example from JavaSE tutorial
public abstract class Shape {
public abstract void draw(Canvas c);
}
public class Circle extends Shape {
private int x, y, radius;
public void draw(Canvas c) {
...
}
}
public class Rectangle extends Shape {
private int x, y, width, height;
public void draw(Canvas c) {
...
}
}
So why a list of dogs (circles) should not be considered implicitly a list of animals (shapes) is because of this situation:
// drawAll method call
drawAll(circleList);
public void drawAll(List<Shape> shapes) {
shapes.add(new Rectangle());
}
So Java "architects" had 2 options which address this problem:
do not consider that a subtype is implicitly it's supertype, and give a compile error, like it happens now
consider the subtype to be it's supertype and restrict at compile the "add" method (so in the drawAll method, if a list of circles, subtype of shape, would be passed, the compiler should detected that and restrict you with compile error into doing that).
For obvious reasons, that chose the first way.
We should also take in consideration how the compiler threats the generic classes: in "instantiates" a different type whenever we fill the generic arguments.
Thus we have ListOfAnimal
, ListOfDog
, ListOfCat
, etc, which are distinct classes that end up being "created" by the compiler when we specify the generic arguments. And this is a flat hierarchy (actually regarding to List
is not a hierarchy at all).
Another argument why covariance doesn't make sense in case of generic classes is the fact that at base all classes are the same - are List
instances. Specialising a List
by filling the generic argument doesn't extend the class, it just makes it work for that particular generic argument.
The problem has been well-identified. But there's a solution; make doSomething generic:
<T extends Animal> void doSomething<List<T> animals) {
}
now you can call doSomething with either List<Dog> or List<Cat> or List<Animal>.
another solution is to build a new list
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>();
List<Animal> animals = new ArrayList<Animal>(dogs);
animals.add(new Cat());
Further to the answer by Jon Skeet, which uses this example code:
// Illegal code - because otherwise life would be Bad
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>(); // ArrayList implements List
List<Animal> animals = dogs; // Awooga awooga
animals.add(new Cat());
Dog dog = dogs.get(0); // This should be safe, right?
At the deepest level, the problem here is that dogs
and animals
share a reference. That means that one way to make this work would be to copy the entire list, which would break reference equality:
// This code is fine
List<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>();
dogs.add(new Dog());
List<Animal> animals = new ArrayList<>(dogs); // Copy list
animals.add(new Cat());
Dog dog = dogs.get(0); // This is fine now, because it does not return the Cat
After calling List<Animal> animals = new ArrayList<>(dogs);
, you cannot subsequently directly assign animals
to either dogs
or cats
:
// These are both illegal
dogs = animals;
cats = animals;
therefore you can't put the wrong subtype of Animal
into the list, because there is no wrong subtype -- any object of subtype ? extends Animal
can be added to animals
.
Obviously, this changes the semantics, since the lists animals
and dogs
are no longer shared, so adding to one list does not add to the other (which is exactly what you want, to avoid the problem that a Cat
could be added to a list that is only supposed to contain Dog
objects). Also, copying the entire list can be inefficient. However, this does solve the type equivalence problem, by breaking reference equality.
I see that the question has already been answered a number of times, just want to put in my inputs on the same question.
Lets us go ahead and create a simplified Animal class hierarchy.
abstract class Animal {
void eat() {
System.out.println("animal eating");
}
}
class Dog extends Animal {
void bark() { }
}
class Cat extends Animal {
void meow() { }
}
Now let us have a look at our old friend Arrays, which we know support polymorphism implicitly-
class TestAnimals {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Animal[] animals = {new Dog(), new Cat(), new Dog()};
Dog[] dogs = {new Dog(), new Dog(), new Dog()};
takeAnimals(animals);
takeAnimals(dogs);
}
public void takeAnimals(Animal[] animals) {
for(Animal a : animals) {
System.out.println(a.eat());
}
}
}
The class compiles fine and when we run the above class we get the output
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
The point to note here is that the takeAnimals() method is defined to take anything which is of type Animal, it can take an array of type Animal and it can take an array of Dog as well because Dog-is-a-Animal. So this is Polymorphism in action.
Let us now use this same approach with generics,
Now say we tweak our code a little bit and use ArrayLists instead of Arrays -
class TestAnimals {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ArrayList<Animal> animals = new ArrayList<Animal>();
animals.add(new Dog());
animals.add(new Cat());
animals.add(new Dog());
takeAnimals(animals);
}
public void takeAnimals(ArrayList<Animal> animals) {
for(Animal a : animals) {
System.out.println(a.eat());
}
}
}
The class above will compile and will produce the output -
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
animal eating
So we know this works, now lets tweak this class a little bit to use Animal type polymorphically -
class TestAnimals {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ArrayList<Animal> animals = new ArrayList<Animal>();
animals.add(new Dog());
animals.add(new Cat());
animals.add(new Dog());
ArrayList<Dog> dogs = new ArrayList<Dog>();
takeAnimals(animals);
takeAnimals(dogs);
}
public void takeAnimals(ArrayList<Animal> animals) {
for(Animal a : animals) {
System.out.println(a.eat());
}
}
}
Looks like there should be no problem in compiling the above class as the takeAnimals() method is designed to take any ArrayList of type Animal and Dog-is-a-Animal so it should not be a deal breaker here.
But, unfortunately the compiler throws an error and doesn't allow us to pass a Dog ArrayList to a variable expecting Animal ArrayList.
You ask why?
Because just imagine, if JAVA were to allow the Dog ArrayList - dogs - to be put into the Animal ArrayList - animals - and then inside the takeAnimals() method somebody does something like -
animals.add(new Cat());
thinking that this should be doable because ideally it is an Animal ArrayList and you should be in a position to add any cat to it as Cat-is-also-a-Animal, but in real you passed a Dog type ArrayList to it.
So, now you must be thinking the the same should have happened with the Arrays as well. You are right in thinking so.
If somebody tries to do the same thing with Arrays then Arrays are also going to throw an error but Arrays handle this error at runtime whereas ArrayLists handle this error at compile time.
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