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Home/ Questions/Q 4544758
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: May 21, 20262026-05-21T15:43:01+00:00 2026-05-21T15:43:01+00:00

There’s a program I’m looking at and it contains a line that I don’t

  • 0

There’s a program I’m looking at and it contains a line that I don’t understand.

NoticeBoard notice = (NoticeBoard) o;

What is that piece of code doing?

That line is taken from here (posting this because you guys might want to understand the full context of the line):

import java.util.Observable;
import java.util.Observer;

class NoticeBoard extends Observable
{
    private String theNotice = "";
    public void setTheNotice( final String notice )
    {
        theNotice = notice;
        setChanged();
        notifyObservers();
    }

    public String getTheNotice()
    {
        return theNotice;
    }
}

class NoticeBoardObserver implements Observer
{
    public void update( Observable o, Object arg )
    {
        NoticeBoard notice = (NoticeBoard) o;
        System.out.println( notice.getTheNotice() );
    }
}

class Main
{
    public static void main( String args[] )
    {
        NoticeBoard floor4 = new NoticeBoard();
        NoticeBoardObserver anObserver = new NoticeBoardObserver();
        floor4.addObserver( anObserver );
        floor4.setTheNotice( "Its summer" );
    }
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-21T15:43:02+00:00Added an answer on May 21, 2026 at 3:43 pm

    It is casting the Observable Object named o to an instance of NoticeBoard. Better would be to check before if o is an instance of NoticeBoard (or else you get a ClassCastException if it isn’t):

    if(o instanceof NoticeBoard) {
        NoticeBoard notice = (NoticeBoard) o;
        System.out.println( notice.getTheNotice() );
    }
    

    Typecasts should be avoided if possible (e.g. by using Java Generics) but here it is needed to comply with the Observer interface signature.

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