java 8 Collector is not a functional inter

2019-02-21 17:58发布

问题:

The follow code :

public class Test {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Stream.of(1,2,3).map(String::valueOf).collect(Collectors::toList)
    }
}

intellij tell me :

Collector<String, A, R> is not a functional interface

but when i modify the code as follows, everything is ok, i don't know why?

public class Test {
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Stream.of(1,2,3).map(String::valueOf).collect(Collectors.<String>toList)
    }
}

回答1:

The reason that the first syntax is illegal is that the target type implied by the method signature—Stream.collect(Collector)—is a Collector. Collector has multiple abstract methods, so it isn't a functional interface, and can't have the @FunctionalInterface annotation.

Method references like Class::function or object::method can only be assigned to functional interface types. Since Collector is not a functional interface, no method reference can be used to supply the argument to collect(Collector).

Instead, invoke Collectors.toList() as a function. The explicit <String> type parameter is unnecessary, and your "working" example won't work without parentheses at the end. This will create a Collector instance that can be passed to collect().



回答2:

The Collector interface has multiple methods (combiner(), finisher(), supplier(), accumulator()) the require an implementation, so it can't be a functional interface, which can have only one method with no default implementation.

I don't see how your question is related to the attached code.