I have an overloaded method that takes a Consumer and a Function object respectively and returns a generic type that matches the corresponding Consumer/Function. I thought this would be fine, but when I try to call either method with a lambda expression I get an error indicating the reference to the method is ambiguous.
Based on my reading of JLS §15.12.2.1. Identify Potentially Applicable Methods: it seems like the compiler should know that my lambda with a void block matches the Consumer method and my lambda with a return type matches the Function method.
I put together the following sample code that fails to compile:
import java.util.function.Consumer;
import java.util.function.Function;
public class AmbiguityBug {
public static void main(String[] args) {
doStuff(getPattern(x -> System.out.println(x)));
doStuff(getPattern(x -> String.valueOf(x)));
}
static Pattern<String, String> getPattern(Function<String, String> function) {
return new Pattern<>(function);
}
static ConsumablePattern<String> getPattern(Consumer<String> consumer) {
return new ConsumablePattern<>(consumer);
}
static void doStuff(Pattern<String, String> pattern) {
String result = pattern.apply("Hello World");
System.out.println(result);
}
static void doStuff(ConsumablePattern<String> consumablePattern) {
consumablePattern.consume("Hello World");
}
public static class Pattern<T, R> {
private final Function<T, R> function;
public Pattern(Function<T, R> function) {
this.function = function;
}
public R apply(T value) {
return function.apply(value);
}
}
public static class ConsumablePattern<T> {
private final Consumer<T> consumer;
public ConsumablePattern(Consumer<T> consumer) {
this.consumer = consumer;
}
public void consume(T value) {
consumer.accept(value);
}
}
}
I also found a similar stackoverflow post that turned out to be a compiler bug. My case is very similar, though a bit more complicated. To me this still looks like a bug, but I wanted to make sure I am not misunderstanding the language spec for lambdas. I'm using Java 8u45 which should have all of the latest fixes.
If I change my method calls to be wrapped in a block everything seems to compile, but this adds additional verbosity and many auto-formatters will reformat it into multiple lines.
doStuff(getPattern(x -> { System.out.println(x); }));
doStuff(getPattern(x -> { return String.valueOf(x); }));