In many times, you may want to create a dynamic array of integers. Unfortunately, the type parameter inside the angle brackets cannot be a primitive type. It is not possible to form an ArrayList<int>. Thanks to the wrapper class, now you can use ArrayList<Integer> to achieve this goal. And the process from int to Integer is called autoboxing. However, you should always be careful about doing this. Take the code below as an exampleAutoboxing can automatically wrap the primitive type to the corresponding wrapper object, which can be convenient in many cases and avoid clutters in your own code. But you should always be careful about this process, especially when comparision. Considerthe follwing code:
Code Example
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public class TestWrapper2 { Â public static void main(String[] args) { Â Â Â Â Integer i1 = 100; Â Â Â Â Integer i2 = 100; Â Â Â Â Integer i3 = 1000; Â Â Â Â Integer i4 = 1000; Â Â Â Â System.out.println(i1==i2); Â Â Â Â System.out.println(i3==i4); Â Â Â Â Â } } |
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It is because that in JDK 5.0, if the value p being boxed is true, false, a byte, an ASCII character, or an integer or short number between -128 and 127 and 128, then let r1 and r2 be the results of any two boxing conversions of p. It is always the case that r1 == r2. And the reason for this rule explained in criterion for autoboxing:
"Ideally, boxing a given primitive value p, would always yield an identical reference. In practice, this may not be feasible using existing implementation techniques. The rules above are a pragmatic compromise. The final clause above requires that certain common values always be boxed into indistinguishable objects. The implementation may cache these, lazily or eagerly."
To convince our idea, we can take an insight of the source code of Integer of JDK 1.6.0_10:
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 private static class IntegerCache {
 private IntegerCache(){}
 static final Integer cache[] = new Integer[-(-128) + 127 + 1];
 static {
    for(int i = 0; i < cache.length; i++)
  cache[i] = new Integer(i - 128);
 }
   }
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Here there exists a cache in the Integer, which clearly explains the result of above code. It also means that if we have enough memory, we could caches all the integer value(-32K-32K), which means that all the int value could be autoboxing to the same Integer object. But However, actually it is impractical, so we should be careful about using the following code:.
Code Example
In many times, you may want to create a dynamic array of integers. Unfortunately, the type parameter inside the angle brackets cannot be a primitive type. It is not possible to form an ArrayList<int>. Thanks to the wrapper class, now you can use ArrayList<Integer> to achieve this goal.
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import java.util.ArrayList; public class TestWrapper1 {  public static void main(String[] args) {   //create an array list of integers, which each element   //is more than 127     ArrayList<Integer> list1 = new ArrayList<Integer>();     for(int i=0;i<10;i++)      list1.add(i);   //create another array list of integers, which each element   //is the same with the first one     ArrayList<Integer> list2 = new ArrayList<Integer>();     for(int i=0;i<10;i++)      list2.add(i);                int counter = 0;     for(int i=0;i<10;i++)      if(list1.get(i) == list2.get(i)) counter++;     //output the total equal number     System.out.println(counter);  } } |
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