
--- On Thu, 10/16/08, Jonathan Cast
So if I say
void wrong(List<?> foo, List<?> bar)
I get two /different/ type variables implicitly filled in?
If I declare a generic class, and then have a method, is there a way, in that method's parameter list, to say `the type parameter that was supplied when my class was instantiated'?
Yes - class Foo<T> { ... void right(List<T> foo, List<T> bar) { foo.add(bar.get(0)); } Can also do it at the method level... void <T> alsoRight(List<T> foo, List<T> bar) { ... }
Yikes. So, in this instance, the difference between Haskell and Java is: if you want to disallow that call to wrong, in Haskell you can...
Not exactly... Java disallows 'wrong' from being written (without class casts and such), because it disallows calling a method which has a wildcard type in a contravariant position. IIRC, Scala handles all this more elegantly. If you stay away from '?', and stick to type variables with Java generics, though, how type checking with generics works in Java should be mostly unsurprising to a Haskeller.