You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to notifications@groovy.apache.org by "Eric Milles (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2018/09/27 17:21:00 UTC
[jira] [Updated] (GROOVY-8815) Inconsistent class file - undefined
type parameter for trait implementer
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-8815?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Eric Milles updated GROOVY-8815:
--------------------------------
Summary: Inconsistent class file - undefined type parameter for trait implementer (was: Inconsistent class file - undefined type parameter for trait)
> Inconsistent class file - undefined type parameter for trait implementer
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: GROOVY-8815
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GROOVY-8815
> Project: Groovy
> Issue Type: Bug
> Affects Versions: 2.4.15, 2.5.2
> Reporter: Eric Milles
> Priority: Major
>
> When compiling the following classes, the Service class ends up with an incomplete type parameter in it. This causes errors for the IDE: "Inconsistent classfile encountered: The undefined type parameter T is referenced from within Service"
> {code:groovy}
> import java.util.function.Consumer
> import groovy.transform.CompileStatic
> class Event<T> {
> Event(String id, T payload) {
> }
> Event<T> setReplyTo(Object replyTo) {
> }
> }
> @CompileStatic
> trait Events {
> def <E extends Event<?>> Registration<Object, Consumer<E>> on(Class key, Closure consumer) {
> }
> }
> interface Registration<K, V> {
> }
> {code}
> javap output for Events shows:
> {code}
> public abstract <E extends reactor.bus.Event<?>> reactor.bus.registry.Registration<java.lang.Object, reactor.fn.Consumer<E>> on(java.lang.Class, groovy.lang.Closure);
> {code}
> javap output for Service shows:
> {code}
> public <E extends Event<T>> Registration<java.lang.Object, java.util.function.Consumer<E>> on(java.lang.Class, groovy.lang.Closure);
> public <E extends Event<?>> Registration<java.lang.Object, java.util.function.Consumer<E>> Eventstrait$super$on(java.lang.Class, groovy.lang.Closure);
> {code}
> It is this "T" in the trait method that is not defined. I think it should be "?" instead when looking at the original method's and the trait bridge method's type parameters.
--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v7.6.3#76005)