- Java Generics Tutorial
- Java Generics - Home
- Java Generics - Overview
- Java Generics - Environment Setup
- Examples - Generic Classes
- Java Generics - Generic Classes
- Type Parameter Naming Conventions
- Java Generics - Type inference
- Java Generics - Generic Methods
- Java Generics - Multiple Type
- Java Generics - Parameterized Types
- Java Generics - Raw Types
- Examples - Bounded Type
- Bounded Type Parameters
- Java Generics - Multiple Bounds
- Examples - Collections
- Java Generics - Generic List
- Java Generics - Generic Set
- Java Generics - Generic Map
- Examples - Wild Cards
- Upper Bounded Wildcards
- Generics - Unbounded Wildcards
- Lower Bounded Wildcards
- Generics - Guidelines for Wildcards
- Type Erasure
- Java Generics - Types Erasure
- Java Generics - Bound Types Erasure
- Unbounded Types Erasure
- Java Generics - Methods Erasure
- Restrictions on Generics
- Java Generics - No Primitive Types
- Java Generics - No Instance
- Java Generics - No Static field
- Java Generics - No Cast
- Java Generics - No instanceOf
- Java Generics - No Array
- Java Generics - No Exception
- Java Generics - No Overload
- Java Generics Useful Resources
- Java Generics - Quick Guide
- Java Generics - Useful Resources
- Java Generics - Discussion
Discuss Java Generics
Java Generic methods and generic classes enable programmers to specify, with a single method declaration, a set of related methods, or with a single class declaration, a set of related types, respectively. Generics also provide compile-time type safety that allows programmers to catch invalid types at compile time. This reference will take you through simple and practical methods using Java Generics.
Advertisements