Just playing and came up with a sweet way to add functionality to enum
s in Java Enum toString() method with this.
Some further tinkering allowed me to nearly also add a tidy (i.e. not throwing an exception) reverse look-up but there's a problem. It's reporting:
error: valueOf(String) in X cannot implement valueOf(String) in HasValue
public enum X implements PoliteEnum, ReverseLookup {
overriding method is static
Is there a way?
The aim here is to silently add (via an interface implementation with a default
method like I added politeName
in the linked answer) a lookup
method that does the valueOf
function without throwing an exception. Is it possible? It is clearly now possible to extend enum
- one of my major problems with Java until now.
Here's my failed attempt:
public interface HasName {
public String name();
}
public interface PoliteEnum extends HasName {
default String politeName() {
return name().replace("_", " ");
}
}
public interface Lookup<P, Q> {
public Q lookup(P p);
}
public interface HasValue {
HasValue valueOf(String name);
}
public interface ReverseLookup extends HasValue, Lookup<String, HasValue> {
@Override
default HasValue lookup(String from) {
try {
return valueOf(from);
} catch (IllegalArgumentException e) {
return null;
}
}
}
public enum X implements PoliteEnum/* NOT ALLOWED :( , ReverseLookup*/ {
A_For_Ism, B_For_Mutton, C_Forth_Highlanders;
}
public void test() {
// Test the politeName
for (X x : X.values()) {
System.out.println(x.politeName());
}
// ToDo: Test lookup
}
See Question&Answers more detail:
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