The Java tutorial on type erasure doesn't seem to detail the specific rules of cast insertion by the compiler. Can someone please explain the specific rules that cause the transformation detailed by the tutorial (reproduced below):
public class Node<T> {
public T data;
public Node(T data) { this.data = data; }
public void setData(T data) {
System.out.println("Node.setData");
this.data = data;
}
}
public class MyNode extends Node<Integer> {
public MyNode(Integer data) { super(data); }
public void setData(Integer data) {
System.out.println("MyNode.setData");
super.setData(data);
}
}
MyNode mn = new MyNode(5);
Node n = (MyNode)mn; // A raw type - compiler throws an unchecked warning
n.setData("Hello");
Integer x = (String)mn.data; // Causes a ClassCastException to be thrown.
Specifically, I'm wondering what rules cause the insertion of (MyNode)
and (String)
. When is a cast inserted, and how is the type chosen for the cast?
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