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20:34
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A: Java generics ambiguous method

Andy TurnerI think that this behaviour is adequately explained in JLS 15.12.2.5 Choosing the Most Specific Method: The informal intuition is that one method is more specific than another if any invocation handled by the first method could be passed on to the other one without a compile-time error. To ...

"it is neither the case that anything you pass to <T> void bind(Class<T>, Type<T>) can be passed to <T> void bind(T, Type<T>), nor vice versa" Can you rephrase that? I'm having trouble understanding what that means
@JamesKleeh any better?
You say the following is false: "Any arguments you pass in a valid invocation of <T> void bind(Class<T>, Type<T>) can also be passed in a valid invocation of <T> void bind(T, Type<T>)". I don't think that is true. An instance of a Class is an object and thus can be passed to T
bind("", new Type<String>("")) is not a valid invocation of bind(Class<T>, Type<T>).
I don't see how that is different from what I said. I don't see how adding the same exact argument to both cases would change anything in regards to which method is more specific.
That isn't what that statement is saying. Its talking about the other way around.
20:34
Which statement are you referring to, and what is the "that" that it isn't what that statement is saying?
So the root of this is why is binder.bind(String.class, new Type<String>("x")) applicable to only one method, while binder.bind(Object.class, new Type<Object>(new Object())) is applicable to both
Why is one being Object have anything to do with it
It is the the same types of data being passed in both cases
Because Object.class is both a Class<Object> and an Object.
2
String.class is not an Object ?
String.class is a Class<String>, but not a String.
And a Type<String> is not a Type<Object>.
Oh, I see
Yeah I get it now
I appreciate your time
So just one more thing, I understand it matches both
However why wouldn't the compiler choose the Class<T> option since Class extends Object ?
wouldn't the Class option be closer?
20:41
I don't know what specific situation you're asking about.
The ambiguous case?
Yes
Or is it because its not treating T as object during compilation
The method resolution proceeds in a number of stages: first, it works out which classes to search for the method; then it finds methods with the right name; then it finds which of those methods with the right name are applicable for these specific arguments.
Then, if it still has more than one applicable method, it does this "which is most specific" resolution /in the general case/, not the specific case of the parameters you've passed.
Because the "for any" doesn't make sense if you just look at it for these specific parameters; and we've already determined that either method is applicable for these specific parameters.

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