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casting - How does the Java cast operator work?

I am trying to debug an issue involving a ClassCastException in Java. In the interest of solving the issue I need to know what is going on when I cast from Object to a specific type. Can anyone explain to me how the Java cast operator works at the Java level and the JVM level?

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Is the JLS good enough?

Casting conversion is applied to the operand of a cast operator (§15.16): the type of the operand expression must be converted to the type explicitly named by the cast operator. Casting contexts allow the use of:

  • an identity conversion (§5.1.1)
  • a widening primitive conversion (§5.1.2)
  • a narrowing primitive conversion (§5.1.3)
  • a widening reference conversion (§5.1.5) optionally followed by an unchecked conversion (§5.1.9)
  • a narrowing reference conversion (§5.1.6) optionally followed by an unchecked conversion
  • a boxing conversion (§5.1.7)
  • an unboxing conversion (§5.1.8).

Actually, maybe this part is more relevant:

The detailed rules for compile-time legality of a casting conversion of a value of compile-time reference type S to a compile-time reference type T are as follows:

  • If S is a class type:
    • If T is a class type, then either |S| <: |T|, or |T| <: |S|; otherwise a compile-time error occurs. Furthermore, if there exists a supertype X of T, and a supertype Y of S, such that both X and Y are provably distinct parameterized types (§4.5), and that the erasures of X and Y are the same, a compile-time error occurs.
    • If T is an interface type:
      • If S is not a final class (§8.1.1), then, if there exists a supertype X of T, and a supertype Y of S, such that both X and Y are provably distinct parameterized types, and that the erasures of X and Y are the same, a compile-time error occurs. Otherwise, the cast is always legal at compile time (because even if S does not implement T, a subclass of S might).
      • If S is a final class (§8.1.1), then S must implement T, or a compile-time error occurs.

    • If T is a type variable, then this algorithm is applied recursively, using the upper bound of T in place of T.
    • If T is an array type, then S must be the class Object, or a compile-time error occurs.
  • If S is an interface type:
    • If T is an array type, then T must implement S, or a compile-time error occurs.
    • If T is a type that is not final (§8.1.1), then if there exists a supertype X of T, and a supertype Y of S, such that both X and Y are provably distinct parameterized types, and that the erasures of X and Y are the same, a compile-time error occurs. Otherwise, the cast is always legal at compile time (because even if T does not implement S, a subclass of T might).
    • If T is a type that is final, then:
      • If S is not a parameterized type or a raw type, then T must implement S, and the cast is statically known to be correct, or a compile-time error occurs.
      • Otherwise, S is either a parameterized type that is an invocation of some generic type declaration G, or a raw type corresponding to a generic type declaration G. Then there must exist a supertype X of T, such that X is an invocation of G, or a compile-time error occurs. Furthermore, if S and X are provably distinct parameterized types then a compile-time error occurs.
  • If S is a type variable, then this algorithm is applied recursively, using the upper bound of S in place of S.
  • If S is an array type SC[], that is, an array of components of type SC:
    • If T is a class type, then if T is not Object, then a compile-time error occurs (because Object is the only class type to which arrays can be assigned).
    • If T is an interface type, then a compile-time error occurs unless T is the type java.io.Serializable or the type Cloneable, the only interfaces implemented by arrays.
    • If T is a type variable, then:
      • If the upper bound of T is Object or the type java.io.Serializable or the type Cloneable, or a type variable that S could legally be cast to by recursively applying these rules, then the cast is legal (though unchecked).
      • If the upper bound of T is an array type TC[], then a compile-time error occurs unless the type SC[] can be cast to TC[] by a recursive application of these compile-time rules for casting.
      • Otherwise, a compile-time error occurs.
    • If T is an array type TC[], that is, an array of components of type TC, then a compile-time error occurs unless one of the following is true:
    • TC and SC are the same primitive type.
    • TC and SC are reference types and type SC can be cast to TC by a recursive application of these compile-time rules for casting.

Perfectly clear now, isn't it? :D

In other words, this is the best I can do without knowing more details about your problem.


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