Sorry to follow up my own question, but can you give some specific cases where 
this would be a problem? Thanks!

-Chris


-----Original Message-----
From: Morrissey, Christopher 
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012 6:41 PM
To: 'Laszlo Hornyak'; engine-devel
Subject: RE: [Engine-devel] eclipse juno vs gwt

Hi Laszlo,

I have several methods that define the @Override annotation and return 
something different from the super class. I haven't had any problems compiling 
them in GWT. The return value does extend from the return value of the super 
class, although this is a requirement in Java as well so I'm not sure where the 
difference is.

-Chris


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Laszlo Hornyak
Sent: Friday, November 02, 2012 6:19 AM
To: engine-devel
Subject: [Engine-devel] eclipse juno vs gwt

Hi,

Just noticed that eclipse juno is adding @Ovewrride annotations to methods that 
are actually overriding something, like in many cases clone and equals methods 
in some of the classes. This is fine for the java compiler, but it in some 
cases the GWT compiler is not going to accept this annotation. E.g. if the 
return type is different than the method with same name in the superclass.

Juno is doing this by default without asking, when saving the file. So be 
extra-careful when editing java classes if they are shared with GWT

Laszlo
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