I am creating a list data structure and am having trouble with the generics syntax for actually using it. All I am trying to do is create an instance of ArrayLinearList<String> and of size 2 and put some strings in it. I have been trying to figure out why setting the first slot to "one" is not correct. This is the error and my code snippet.
myList[0] = "one";
The error message is: error: incompatible types: String cannot be converted to ArrayLinearList<String>
public class ArrayLinearList<E> implements LinearListADT<E> {
private Object[] array;
int currentSize = 0;
//Constructor (no arguments)
public ArrayLinearList() {
currentSize = 2;
// array = (ArrayLinearList[]) new Object[2]; //Start with a container of size 2
array = new Object[2];
}
public static void main(String[] var0) {
ArrayLinearList<String>[] myList;
myList = new ArrayLinearList[2];
myList[0] = "one";
}
}
I am having quite a bit of trouble with the syntax with using generics in java. In my mind I have an array of size 2 where I am going to be placing strings. I will add more methods later but I want to understand why my current syntax is incorrect for placing this string in the array.
Listis almost always a better alternative that doesn't force you to suppress compiler warnings or perform unsafe casts.ArrayList<String>is of a type. Do you have an example of the unsafe cast you mention? As I see it, the only confusion left is in covariance.(Foo<Bar>[]) new Foo[n]to get an array of a generic type, and that'll give you an unchecked cast warning. And that can lead to ClassCastExceptions at runtime, precisely because arrays are covariant and generics are invariant.