Why does the following
public class ListBox {
private Random random = new Random();
private List<? extends Collection<Object>> box;
public ListBox() {
box = new ArrayList<>();
}
public void addTwoForks() {
int sizeOne = random.nextInt(1000);
int sizeTwo = random.nextInt(1000);
ArrayList<Object> one = new ArrayList<>(sizeOne);
ArrayList<Object> two = new ArrayList<>(sizeTwo);
box.add(one);
box.add(two);
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
new ListBox().addTwoForks();
}
}
Not work? Just toying around with generics for the purpose of learning and I expected that I would be able to insert anything that extends Collection in there but I get this error:
The method add(capture#2-of ? extends Collection<Object>) in the type List<capture#2-of ? extends Collection<Object>> is not applicable for the arguments (ArrayList<Object>)
The method add(capture#3-of ? extends Collection<Object>) in the type List<capture#3-of ? extends Collection<Object>> is not applicable for the arguments (ArrayList<Object>)
at ListBox.addTwoForks(ListBox.java:23)
at ListBox.main(ListBox.java:28)
You've declared box to be a List of something that extends Collection of Object. But according to the Java compiler, it could be anything that extends Collection, i.e. List<Vector<Object>>. So it must disallow add operations that take the generic type parameter for this reason. It can't let you add an ArrayList<Object> to a List that could be List<Vector<Object>>.
Try removing the wildcard:
private List<Collection<Object>> box;
This should work because you can certainly add an ArrayList<Object> to a List of Collection<Object>.
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