Q&A in question: Multiple wildcards on a generic methods makes Java compiler (and me!) very confused.
Brief explanation of how it's wrong:
The non-technical summary in the beginning of the answer is fine.
The technical reasoning in the later section, Appendix: The rules of capture conversion, is a misinterpretation of the specification.
They've missed a few important sections of the specification which clearly explain it otherwise. (And I suppose I should point out these sections did exist at the time the answer was written.)
There are also a few choice quotes that show that polygenelubricants' interpretation is wrong.
To sum it up, the question asks:
Am I misunderstanding the capture conversion rules for wildcards?
Yes, and the answer misunderstands it too.
It's not completely incorrect, but the misinterpretation leaves the reader with a wrong idea of a what a particular feature means.
Some of the comments shed light on the situation as well:
I'm actually not quite sure if my answer is correct, now. I'm getting more and more confused […]. I think my answer is partly wrong. I'm keeping this up to inspire others to investigate.
Okay I think I finally got this now. Sorry if I caused confusion with the recursive capture conversion thing (which I'm still not sure what it's all about); I was thoroughly confused myself […].
The revision history shows polygenelubricants posted an initial answer with the incorrect technical reasoning, then added the correct non-technical summary, but retained the incorrect section.
So, the problem here is that the question is extremely long.
Nowadays, I suppose it could be closed as 'too broad'. But maybe this depends on who you ask, since I guess there are proponents of the idea that a good answer justifies a somewhat off-topic question. Also it's self-answered, but it wasn't posted this way. Instead, it seems like it started out small and inflated over time.
A complete answer (which I've written, but did not post since I had doubts about whether I should or not) turned out to be a bit longer than the question and answer combined. It's about the size of a blog post. (But I don't have a blog and I don't have interest in having one.)
I don't see a viable way to make the answer shorter, because the question asks about so many things.
I could write a short answer that refuted the mistakes in polygenelubricants' answer, but I don't want to do this. I'd rather the answer stood on its own, and I also have a lot of respect for this user so I didn't want to focus too much on how their answer is wrong. I just want to post a right one.
Some other considerations:
- I could post a comment, but likely nobody would see it. (Also, as I said before, I feel like the question deserves a proper answer.)
- I could edit the answer (note: heavily), but polygenelubricants' profile says they prefer to receive comments and fix errors themselves. They have not visited the site since 2013 so it seems unlikely they will fix it themselves. I assume they would also not have time, even if they did see the comment.
- I could let it go, but then the Q&A is just there hanging around being not quite right and not worth linking to. I think a good answer would be useful as a resource, for whoever wants to read it.
I don't really have a problem with not posting my answer. I wouldn't feel like my time was wasted.
Should I post my answer or possibly do something else?
(Maybe I should put less thought in to it? : / )