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Harry James
14,780 PointsHey jinhwa!
We learnt about generics as part of the Interfaces video.
I'll quickly go over what one is again for you. A generic is a specific declaration of type, shown by a pair of angle brackets. For example, if we have a list and we get an item from it, we need to use casting:
List list = new ArrayList();
list.add("hello");
String s = (String) list.get(0);
but if we use a generic:
List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
list.add("hello");
String s = list.get(0);
We do not need to use casting, plus it's clearer to read what the list contains. This benefits us because if we do something wrong, we'll know about it at compile time, which is a lot easier to detect and fix than at runtime.
Armed with this information again, you should now be able to complete the challenge. What you want to do is update the Comparable interface to use the generic type of BlogPost. You should also update the compareTo() so that it no longer uses just an Object, and instead uses the more specific BlogPost class.
mrbrutus
8,047 Pointsmrbrutus
8,047 Pointspublic class BlogPost implements Comparable<BlogPost>, Serializable { //Notice the "Comparable<BlogPost>" part. This is what allows you to compare a BlogPost object to another BlogPost object.