Let's say I have two classes and two methods:
class Scratch {
private class A{}
private class B extends A{}
public Optional<A> getItems(List<String> items){
return items.stream()
.map(s -> new B())
.findFirst();
}
public Optional<A> getItems2(List<String> items){
return Optional.of(
items.stream()
.map(s -> new B())
.findFirst()
.get()
);
}
}
Why does getItems2 compile while getItems gives compiler error
incompatible types: java.util.Optional<Scratch.B> cannot be converted to java.util.Optional<Scratch.A>
So when I get the value of the Optional returned by findFirst and wrap it again with Optional.of the compiler recognizes the inheritance but not if I use directly the result of findFirst.
An Optional<B> is not a subtype of Optional<A>. Unlike other programming languages, Java’s generic type system does not know “read only types” or “output type parameters”, so it doesn’t understand that Optional<B> only provides an instance of B and could work at places where an Optional<A> is required.
When we write a statement like
Optional<A> o = Optional.of(new B()); Java’s type inference uses the target type to determine that we want
Optional<A> o = Optional.<A>of(new B()); which is valid as new B() can be used where an instance of A is required.
The same applies to
return Optional.of( items.stream() .map(s -> new B()) .findFirst() .get() ); where the method’s declared return type is used to infer the type arguments to the Optional.of invocation and passing the result of get(), an instance of B, where A is required, is valid.
Unfortunately, this target type inference doesn’t work through chained invocations, so for
return items.stream() .map(s -> new B()) .findFirst(); it is not used for the map call. So for the map call, the type inference uses the type of new B() and its result type will be Stream<B>. The second problem is that findFirst() is not generic, calling it on a Stream<T> invariably produces a Optional<T> (and Java’s generics does not allow to declare a type variable like <R super T>, so it is not even possible to produce an Optional<R> with the desired type here).
→ The solution is to provide an explicit type for the map call:
public Optional<A> getItems(List<String> items){ return items.stream() .<A>map(s -> new B()) .findFirst(); } Just for completeness, as said, findFirst() is not generic and hence, can’t use the target type. Chaining a generic method allowing a type change would also fix the problem:
public Optional<A> getItems(List<String> items){ return items.stream() .map(s -> new B()) .findFirst() .map(Function.identity()); } But I recommend using the solution of providing an explicit type for the map invocation.
The issue you have is with inheritance for generics. Optional< B > doesn't extend Optional< A >, so it can't be returned as such.
I'd imagine that something like this:
public Optional<? extends A> getItems( List<String> items){
return items.stream()
.map(s -> new B())
.findFirst();
}
Or:
public Optional<?> getItems( List<String> items){
return items.stream()
.map(s -> new B())
.findFirst();
}
Would work fine, depending on your needs.
Edit: escaping some characters
An Optional<B> is not a sub-class of Optional<A>.
In the first case, you have a Stream<B>, so findFirst returns an Optional<B>, which cannot be converted to an Optional<A>.
In the second case, you have a stream pipeline that returns an instance of B. When you pass that instance to Optional.of(), the compiler sees that the return type of the method is Optional<A>, so Optional.of() returns an Optional<A> (since an Optional<A> can hold an instance of B as its value (since B extends A)).
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