I changed my method to generic method. What is happening now is that I was deserializing the class inside the methodB
and accessing its methods which I can not do anymore.
<T> void methodB(Class<T> clazz) {
T var;
HashMap<String, T> hash = new HashMap<>();
}
void methodA () {
methodB(classA.class);
}
Initially inside methodB
with no generics,
var = mapper.convertValue(iter.next(), ClassA.class);
var.blah() //works fine
After using generics,
var = mapper.convertValue(iter.next(), clazz);
var.blah() //cannot resolve the method.
How do I access blah()
method of classA
?
I think you should use interfaces instead of generics, if you want to call the same 'blah' function on a variety of classes (A,X,Y,Z) (each of which has the same function signature)..
Your other option (if you cannot modify A, e.t.c) is to use reflection. read more about this in https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/reflect/
Thanks to Passing a class with type parameter as type parameter for generic method in Java. Solved using TypeToken
The line where you assign to
var
at runtime is absolutely irrelevant. The only thing that matters for compiling a call is the static (compile-time) type ofvar
. SinceT
is unbounded (other than byObject
), it is not known to support any methods, other than those provided byObject
. Both pieces of code should fail to compile.