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Home/ Questions/Q 3324260
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T23:24:01+00:00 2026-05-17T23:24:01+00:00

It seems that Java can’t choose the most appropriate method implementation based on the

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It seems that Java can’t choose the most appropriate method implementation based on the runtime type of an argument, as documented here. Recapitulating the example:

class Superclass {}
class Subclass extends Superclass {}
class Test {
    public void aMethod(Superclass s) {...}
    public void aMethod(Subclass s) {...}
}

Which method of the Test class is executed is determined based on the type of the reference, not the type of the instance. Again, based on the linked examples:

Test aTest = new Test();
Superclass aSuper = new Subclass();
test.aMethod(aSuper);

It is aMethod(Superclass s) that executes, not aMethod(Subclass s).

I was trying to create a variation on the listener pattern, where listeners ‘plug in’ via an interface, and the listeners have methods defined for subclasses of the interfaces.

As a quick example of what I mean, say I’m building an alarm clock that can have functionality plugged in.

The implementation for the above I had in mind would look like an interface Event, with a subclass WakeUpEvent, and an interface EventListener requiring implementation of handle(Event evt).

I hoped to create a class implementing a no-op handle(Event evt) with a specific handle(WakeUpEvent evt) if the listener wanted to deal with that type of event.

Of course, this approach won’t work as-is – the obvious solution is runtime instanceof checks – yuk.

Are there any patterns or approaches that I can use to get the behaviour I want?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T23:24:01+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 11:24 pm

    These situations are when I think of Visitor or double dispatch pattern.

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