This top part of this answer is basically what Radiodef said in comments above. I'm not wanting to steal those words, but the answer below the ---
doesn't really work without the prior explanation.
As pointed out by Radiodef, the reason why this doesn't work in the first case is because it's using a raw type, Collection
. Instead, use Collection<?>
, and it will work:
return ((Collection<?>) value).stream()
.map(MyClass::defaultFormatter)
.collect(Collectors.joining(eol));
The reason why it works with the explicit variable is because of unchecked conversion. Note that the following produces an unchecked conversion warning:
Stream<String> stream = ((Collection) value).stream()
.map(MyClass::defaultFormatter);
The actual type of the expression on the RHS is Stream
; you're allowed to coerce that to a Stream<String>
, as described in JLS Sec 5.1.9:
There is an unchecked conversion from the raw class or interface type (§4.8) G
to any parameterized type of the form G<T1,...,Tn>
.
The reason why you can't do the same without the variable is a bit more subtle. This answer addresses the issue more directly: when you use a raw type, all generics are erased from the type, not just ones directly related to the omitted type.
So, the type of Stream.collect
when the Stream
is raw is the erasure of the type when it is generic:
Stream.collect(Collector<? super T,A,R> collector)
returns an R
;
- The erasure of
R
is Object
so the return type of the collect
call is Object
, as you observe here. This can't be automatically coerced to a List<String>
via unchecked conversion because it's not List
.
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