I am trying out a easy to understand example about contravariance in Java and having a issue understanding.
In the below example I have List<? super CarBill> list1
. My understanding is i should be able to add an object of any superclass of CarBill
. By that logic i should be able to add objects of Bill
class to it too right ?
I get a compilation error.
package Generics;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class VarianceTests {
static class Bill{
String vName;
String type;
Bill(String vName){
this.vName=vName;
}
Bill(String vName,String type){
this.vName=vName;
this.type=type;
}
}
static class CarBill extends Bill{
String name;
CarBill(String name)
{
super(name,"Car");
}
}
static class Car<T extends Bill> {
T car;
Car(T car){
this.car=car;
}
String getNameOfCar() {
return car.vName;
}
}
public static void main(String args[]) {
CarBill cBill = new CarBill("Baleno");
Bill bill=new Bill("Whatever");
Car car = new Car(bill); //cBill is valid too as Car accepts <? extends Bill>
List<? super CarBill> list1 = new ArrayList<>();
list1.add(cBill);
list1.add(bill);
}
public void acceptListOfCars(List<? extends Bill> list1) {
Bill b = list1.get(0); //Valid syntax
}
}