Question

Is there any Java compiler flag that one can pass to tell the compiler to disallow the use of raw types? That is, for any generic class, let the compiler force that the parameterized version be used, and throw a compilation error otherwise?

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Solution

JDK7 (b38) introduces -Xlint:rawtypes. As mentioned above, -Xlint:unchecked warns about unchecked conversions.

Maurizio Cimadamore of the javac team wrote a weblog entry about it.

OTHER TIPS

You can configure the use of raw types within Eclipse to be a warning or an error.

It's under Preferences / Java / Compiler / Errors and Warnings / Generic types / Usage of a raw type.

javac doesn't have anything like this as far as I'm aware - even with -Xlint:all you don't get a warning for something like:

ArrayList x = new ArrayList();

You can get it to warn you via:

-Xlint:unchecked

This will generate warning in some, but not all, cases of missing generics.

import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

public class Main
{
    public static void main(final String[] argv)
    {
        List list = new ArrayList(); // no warning at all

        list.add("Hello"); // warning will be on this line
    }
}

Given the warning you can then go back and fix up the code to add the generics to the declarations.

Not ideal, and if I remember right it still won't catch everything.

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