What is SuppressWarnings ("unchecked") in Java? What is SuppressWarnings ("unchecked") in Java? java java

What is SuppressWarnings ("unchecked") in Java?


Sometimes Java generics just doesn't let you do what you want to, and you need to effectively tell the compiler that what you're doing really will be legal at execution time.

I usually find this a pain when I'm mocking a generic interface, but there are other examples too. It's usually worth trying to work out a way of avoiding the warning rather than suppressing it (the Java Generics FAQ helps here) but sometimes even if it is possible, it bends the code out of shape so much that suppressing the warning is neater. Always add an explanatory comment in that case!

The same generics FAQ has several sections on this topic, starting with "What is an "unchecked" warning?" - it's well worth a read.


It is an annotation to suppress compile warnings about unchecked generic operations (not exceptions), such as casts. It essentially implies that the programmer did not wish to be notified about these which he is already aware of when compiling a particular bit of code.

You can read more on this specific annotation here:

SuppressWarnings

Additionally, Oracle provides some tutorial documentation on the usage of annotations here:

Annotations

As they put it,

"The 'unchecked' warning can occur when interfacing with legacy code written before the advent of generics (discussed in the lesson titled Generics)."


It could also mean that the current Java type system version isn't good enough for your case. There were several JSR propositions / hacks to fix this: Type tokens, Super Type Tokens, Class.cast().

If you really need this supression, narrow it down as much as possible (e.g. don't put it onto the class itself or onto a long method). An example:

public List<String> getALegacyListReversed() {   @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") List<String> list =       (List<String>)legacyLibrary.getStringList();   Collections.reverse(list);   return list;}