Correspondig the following开发者_如何学编程 question:
Java: Enum parameter in method
I would like to know, how can I format the code to require enums generically.
Foo.java
public enum Foo {
a(1), b(2);
}
Bar.java
public class Bar {
public Bar(generic enum);
}
Later on I'll have more enum classes like "foo", but you can still create bar containing any kind of enum class. I have "jdk1.6.0_20" by the way...
See the methods in EnumSet for reference, e.g.
public static <E extends Enum<E>> EnumSet<E> of(E e)
(This method returns an EnumSet with one element from a given Enum element e)
So the generic bounds you need are: <E extends Enum<E>>
Actually, you will probably make Bar
itself generic:
public class Bar<E extends Enum<E>> {
private final E item;
public E getItem(){
return item;
}
public Bar(final E item){
this.item = item;
}
}
You may also add a factory method like from
, with
etc.
public static <E2 extends Enum<E2>> Bar<E2> with(E2 item){
return new Bar<E2>(item);
}
That way, in client code you only have to write the generic signature once:
// e.g. this simple version
Bar<MyEnum> bar = Bar.with(MyEnum.SOME_INSTANCE);
// instead of the more verbose version:
Bar<MyEnum> bar = new Bar<MyEnum>(MyEnum.SOME_INSTANCE);
Reference:
- Java Tutorial - Learning the Java Language
- Classes and Objects > Enum Types
- Generics
You can also do it this way:
public class Bar {
public Bar(Enum<?> e){}
}
Every enumeration extends Enum. Then you can use this if you need the enum constants:
e.getDeclaringClass().getEnumConstants()
public class bar {
public <E extends Enum<E>> void bar(E enumObject);
}
The bar
method can now receive any kind of enum.
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