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Collection Casting
Because collections in Apex have a declared type at runtime, Apex allows collection casting.
Collections can be cast in a similar manner that arrays can be cast in Java. For example, a list of CustomerPurchaseOrder objects can be assigned to a list of PurchaseOrder objects if class CustomerPurchaseOrder is a child of class PurchaseOrder.
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17public virtual class PurchaseOrder {
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19 Public class CustomerPurchaseOrder extends PurchaseOrder {
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21 }
22 {
23 List<PurchaseOrder> POs = new PurchaseOrder[] {};
24 List<CustomerPurchaseOrder> CPOs = new CustomerPurchaseOrder[]{};
25 POs = CPOs;}
26 }Once the CustomerPurchaseOrder list is assigned to the PurchaseOrder list variable, it can be cast back to a list of CustomerPurchaseOrder objects, but only because that instance was originally instantiated as a list of CustomerPurchaseOrder. A list of PurchaseOrder objects that is instantiated as such cannot be cast to a list of CustomerPurchaseOrder objects, even if the list of PurchaseOrder objects contains only CustomerPurchaseOrder objects.
If the user of a PurchaseOrder list that only includes CustomerPurchaseOrders objects tries to insert a non-CustomerPurchaseOrder subclass of PurchaseOrder (such as InternalPurchaseOrder), a runtime exception results. This is because Apex collections have a declared type at runtime.