Possible Duplicate:
Method Overloading for NULL parameter
The following code compiles and goes fine.
public class Main
{
public void temp(Object o)
{
System.out.println("The method with the receiving parameter of type Object has been invoked.");
}
public void temp(String s)
{
System.out.println("The method with the receiving parameter of type String has been invoked.");
}
public void temp(int i)
{
System.out.println("The method with the receiving parameter of type int has been invoked.");
}
public static void main(String[] args)
{
Main main=new Main();
main.temp(null);
}
}
In this code, the method to be invoked is the one that accepts the parameter of type String
The docs say.
If more than one member method is both accessible and applicable to a method invocation, it is necessary to choose one to provide the descriptor for the run-time method dispatch. The Java programming language uses the rule that the most specific method is chosen.
but I don't understand when one of the methods in the code that accepts the parameter of the primitive int
is modified to accept the parameter of the wrapper type Integer
such as,
public void temp(Integer i)
{
System.out.println("The method with the receiving parameter of type Integer has been invoked.");
}
a compile-time error is issued.
reference to temp is ambiguous, both method temp(java.lang.String) in methodoverloadingpkg.Main and method temp(java.lang.Integer) in methodoverloadingpkg.Main match
In this particular scenario, why is it legal to overload a method with a primitive data type which however doesn't appear to be the case with its corresponding wrapper type?