200 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
200 lines
5.4 KiB
TeX
\documentclass[a4paper]{article}
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\usepackage{graphicx}
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\usepackage[hidelinks]{hyperref}
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\usepackage[english]{babel}
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\usepackage{fancyhdr}
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\usepackage{listings}
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\usepackage{xcolor}
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\usepackage{float}
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\usepackage{lmodern}
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\usepackage[margin=2cm,top=2.5cm]{geometry}
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\hypersetup{pdfborder={0 0 0}}
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\usepackage[nomessages]{fp}
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\lstset{
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basicstyle=\small\ttfamily,
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%frame=shadowbox,
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rulesepcolor=\color{black},
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columns=fullflexible,
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commentstyle=\color{gray},
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keywordstyle=\color{blue},
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mathescape=true,
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aboveskip=1em,
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captionpos=b,
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abovecaptionskip=1em,
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belowcaptionskip=1em
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}
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\fancyhead[R]{Advanced Java Programming -- Assignment 2 -- Federico Lagrasta,
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Claudio Maggioni}
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\pagestyle{fancy}
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\begin{document}
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\begin{titlepage}
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\scshape
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\centering
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\includegraphics[width=3cm, keepaspectratio]{logo_usi.png}
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\par
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\vspace{0.1cm}
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\texttt{FACULTY OF INFORMATICS}
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\vspace{1cm}
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\raisebox{-\baselineskip}{\rule{\textwidth}{1px}}
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\rule{\textwidth}{1px}
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\vspace{0.2cm}
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{\LARGE{{ADVANCED JAVA PROGRAMMING}}}\par \vspace{0.1cm}
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Assignment 2
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\rule{\textwidth}{2px}
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\vspace{1cm}
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\begin{tabular}{lp{1cm}l}
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Author & \rule{0pt}{3ex} & FEDERICO \mbox{LAGRASTA}\\
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&&\\
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& \rule{0pt}{3ex} & CLAUDIO \mbox{MAGGIONI}\\
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\end{tabular}
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\vspace{1.3cm}
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\vfill
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\today
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\end{titlepage}
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\section*{A}
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\subsection*{1}
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The snippet would cause a compile time error at line 4 since it is not possible
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to call \texttt{get(...)} on an lower bounded \texttt{List} (i.e.\ a variable
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with \texttt{List<?\ super SOMETHING>} static type, where \texttt{SOMETHING} can
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be any class), in this case on \texttt{src}. This is due to the get-put
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principle. If the code snippet were legal, the following example would have been
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legal but not be type safe:
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\begin{lstlisting}[caption=Type unsafe example of covariant access on a
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\texttt{List}
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with a lower bounded wildcard., language=java]
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List<Object> objects = new ArrayList<>();
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objects.put(new Object());
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List<? super String> strings = objects;
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// not type safe, as strings[0], i.e. objects[0] is an Object and not a String
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String s = strings.get(0);
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\end{lstlisting}
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Additionally, the snippet would cause another compile time error at line 5,
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since it is also not possible to call \texttt{set(...)} on an upper bounded
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\texttt{List} (i.e.\ a \texttt{List<?\ extends SOMETHING>}). The following
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example would not be type safe otherwise:
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\begin{lstlisting}[caption=Type unsafe example of contravariant access on a
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\texttt{List}
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with an upper bounded wildcard., language=java]
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List<Integer> ints = new ArrayList<>();
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ints.put(42);
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List<? extends Number> numbers = ints;
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numbers.set(0, 50.0);
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// not type safe, as numbers[0], i.e. ints[0] is a Double and not an Integer
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Integer i = ints.get(0);
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\end{lstlisting}
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\subsection*{2}
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The code does not compile.
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\section*{B}
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\subsection*{1}
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No, as the compiler will trust our cast. However, an ``unchecked cast''
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compiler warning will be reported.
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\subsection*{2}
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Yes, as arrays can not be downcasted. Specifically, a
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\texttt{ClassCastException} will be thrown at line 8, where the
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\texttt{Object[]} instance would be needed to be downcasted to \texttt{String[]}.
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Note that the exception is not thrown inside \texttt{myArrayGenerator(...)} as
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\texttt{T} is erased to \texttt{Object} during compliation, making the explicit
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cast redundant, but in turn making the implicit cast added by the use of
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generics illegal.
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\section*{C}
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\subsection*{1}
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The compiler would report 3 compile time errors (at lines 3, 5 and 7)
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as generic type argument \texttt{T} cannot be referenced in static contexts,
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i.e.\ in static field declarations, static method signatures or static method
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bodies. This compiler rule is a side effect of erasure.
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\subsection*{2}
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The code does not compile.
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\section*{D}
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\subsection*{1}
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The code will not compile, as the two methods included in the class have the
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same signature after erasure, since \texttt{Class<?>} is erased to the type
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\texttt{Class} and the types \texttt{T} and \texttt{U} will be erased to
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\texttt{Object}. Therefore, the class after erasure would look like this:
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\marginpar[right text]{\color{white}\url{https://youtu.be/RUN6Kqd9xgs}}
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\begin{lstlisting}[caption=Class \texttt{Couple<T, U>} after erasure.,
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language=java]
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public class Couple {
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public Class getType(Object t) {
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return t.getClass();
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}
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public Class getType(Object u) {
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return u.getClass();
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}
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}
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\end{lstlisting}
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thus making the two methods have an identical signature, which is illegal.
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\subsection*{2}
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The code does not compile.
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\section*{E}
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\subsection*{1}
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It will print \texttt{I am a class} since the keyword \texttt{super} prioritizes
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the parent class over interfaces. The implemented interface would have to be
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referred as \texttt{Second.super} (i.e.\ changing line 17 to
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\texttt{Second.super.doSomething();} would result in the \texttt{I am an
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interface} output).
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\subsection*{2}
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It won't compile. \texttt{First.doSomething()} would be inherited by the child
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class \texttt{Third} over \texttt{Second.doSomething()} since parent classes
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have priority interfaces with default methods w.r.t.\ interfaces.
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However, \texttt{First.doSomething()} has default or ``package-private''
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visibility while the interface \texttt{Second} requires \texttt{doSomething()}
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to be public (as method signatures in interfaces are by default public).
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Therefore, a compile-time error is reported due to assigning ``weaker access
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privilegies'' to the \texttt{doSomething()} method than required by interface
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\texttt{Second}.
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\end{document}
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