Comparator.reversed() does not compile using lambda

Andrey picture Andrey · Aug 7, 2014 · Viewed 26.3k times · Source

I have a list with some User objects and i'm trying to sort the list, but only works using method reference, with lambda expression the compiler gives an error:

List<User> userList = Arrays.asList(u1, u2, u3);
userList.sort(Comparator.comparing(u -> u.getName())); // works
userList.sort(Comparator.comparing(User::getName).reversed()); // works
userList.sort(Comparator.comparing(u -> u.getName()).reversed()); // Compiler error

Error:

com\java8\collectionapi\CollectionTest.java:35: error: cannot find symbol
            userList.sort(Comparator.comparing(u -> u.getName()).reversed());
                                                     ^
symbol:   method getName()
location: variable u of type Object
1 error

Answer

Stuart Marks picture Stuart Marks · Aug 7, 2014

This is a weakness in the compiler's type inferencing mechanism. In order to infer the type of u in the lambda, the target type for the lambda needs to be established. This is accomplished as follows. userList.sort() is expecting an argument of type Comparator<User>. In the first line, Comparator.comparing() needs to return Comparator<User>. This implies that Comparator.comparing() needs a Function that takes a User argument. Thus in the lambda on the first line, u must be of type User and everything works.

In the second and third lines, the target typing is disrupted by the presence of the call to reversed(). I'm not entirely sure why; both the receiver and the return type of reversed() are Comparator<T> so it seems like the target type should be propagated back to the receiver, but it isn't. (Like I said, it's a weakness.)

In the second line, the method reference provides additional type information that fills this gap. This information is absent from the third line, so the compiler infers u to be Object (the inference fallback of last resort), which fails.

Obviously if you can use a method reference, do that and it'll work. Sometimes you can't use a method reference, e.g., if you want to pass an additional parameter, so you have to use a lambda expression. In that case you'd provide an explicit parameter type in the lambda:

userList.sort(Comparator.comparing((User u) -> u.getName()).reversed());

It might be possible for the compiler to be enhanced to cover this case in a future release.