I'm little confused about how the generics works? I'm learning about function
API in java and there I just test Function
interface and got confused about compose
method that how the generics is working in compose
method.
Reading the generics on the java official tutorial website I realize that if we have any generic type in the method return or parameters we have to declare that type in the signature of method as explained below.
Here is the method I read in official docs tutorial.
public static <K, V> boolean compare(Pair<K, V> p1, Pair<K, V> p2) {
return p1.getKey().equals(p2.getKey()) &&
p1.getValue().equals(p2.getValue());
}
Above method have two types, K, V which are declared in the signature after the static keyword as but when I read java Function
API there is one method called compose
and the signature of the compose is as
default <V> Function<V, R> compose(Function<? super V, ? extends T> before) {
Objects.requireNonNull(before);
return (V v) -> apply(before.apply(v));
}
1) The first question where is the T & R declared? which are being used in the return type and in the parameter. Or my understanding is wrong?
Then I read more in generics tutorials and then I try to understand the concept of super
and extends
in generics and read here then I test compose
method more and then confused again about how the super
and extends
works in the compose
method?
public static void main(String... args){
Function<Integer, String> one = (i) -> i.toString();
Function<String, Integer> two = (i) -> Integer.parseInt(i);
one.compose(two);
}
As above I have declared two Function with lamdas. One is having Integer input and String output the other one is reversed from it.
2) The second question is that how Integer
and String
are related to extends
and super
? There is no relation between String
and Integer
class no one is extending each other then how it is working?
I tried my best to explain my question/problem. Let me know what you didn't understand I will try again.