I have a behaviour that I don’t understand with overloading in Java.
Here is my code:
interface I {}
class A implements I {}
class B {
public void test(I i) {}
public void test (A a) {}
}
When I call the following line:
I a = new A();
b.test(a);
I thought the called method would be test(A) but visibly it’s test(I).
I don’t understand why. In runtime my variable a is a A even A inherits I.
Because the reference type is of I eventhough you have object of type A.
A a = new A();
will invoke method
test (A a) {}As per JLS Chapter 15: