What I do not understand is why I am getting an error compiling my code when a String is in fact an object, and the compiler is saying otherwise. I dont know why I keep getting this error message
symbol: method compareTo(Object)
location: variable least of type Object
.\DataSet.java:17: error: cannot find symbol
else if(maximum.compareTo(x) < 0)
here is the code. I’m trying to utilize the class comparable to allow two objects to use the compareTo method. In the tester, I’m just trying to use a basic string object to compare.
public class DataSetTester
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
DataSet ds = new DataSet();
String man = "dog";
String woman = "cat";
ds.add(man);
ds.add(woman);
System.out.println("Maximum Word: " + ds.getMaximum());
}
}
Class:
public class DataSet implements Comparable
{
private Object maximum;
private Object least;
private int count;
private int answer;
public void add(Object x)
{
if(count == 0){
least = x;
maximum = x;
}
else if(least.compareTo(x) > 0)
least = x;
else if(maximum.compareTo(x) < 0)
maximum = x;
count++;
}
public int compareTo(Object anObject)
{
return this.compareTo(anObject);
}
public Object getMaximum()
{
return maximum;
}
public Object getLeast()
{
return least;
}
}
Comparable Interface:
public interface Comparable
{
public int compareTo(Object anObject);
}
The problem is that
DataSetimplementsComparable, butObjectdoesn’t.Instead of storing
Objects, you want to storeComparables. However, if you do get this to compile, you will get into an infinite loop right here:It’s recommended that in newer code, you use the generic
Comparable<T>interface. Your code would then look like this:Edit – just saw that you’re comparing strings. In that case, you don’t really need
DataSetto implementComparable. However, if you do need it for something else, what I wrote still stands.