The most commonly used type parameter names are:
- E - Element (used extensively by the Java Collections Framework)
- K - Key
- N - Number
- T - Type
- V - Value
- S,U,V etc. - 2nd, 3rd, 4th types
public interface Pair<K, V> {
public K getKey();
public V getValue();
}
public class OrderedPair<K, V> implements Pair<K, V> {
private K key;
private V value;
public OrderedPair(K key, V value) {
this.key = key;
this.value = value;
}
public K getKey() { return key; }
public V getValue() { return value; }
}
public class Box<T> {
private T t;
public void set(T t) {
this.t = t;
}
public T get() {
return t;
}
public <U extends Number> void inspect(U u){
System.out.println("T: " + t.getClass().getName());
System.out.println("U: " + u.getClass().getName());
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Box<Integer> integerBox = new Box<Integer>();
integerBox.set(new Integer(10));
integerBox.inspect("some text"); // error: this is still String!
}
}
A type variable with multiple bounds is a subtype of all the types listed in the bound. If one of the bounds is a class, it must be specified first. For example:
Class A { /* ... */ }
interface B { /* ... */ }
interface C { /* ... */ }
class D <T extends A & B & C> { /* ... */ }
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