The initialization in the 1st case is a simple assignment of a constant value. Nothing interesting... except that this is a primitive value that is being assigned, and primitive values don't have "identity"; i.e. all "copies" of the int
value 20
are the same.
The 2nd and 3rd cases are a bit more interesting. The 2nd form is using "boxing", and is actually equivalent to this:
Integer i = Integer.valueOf(20);
The valueOf
method may create a new object, or it may return a reference to an object that existed previously. (In fact, the JLS guarantees that valueOf
will cache the Integer
values for numbers in the range -128..+127 ...)
By contrast new Integer(20)
always creates a new object.
This issue with new object (or not) is important if you are in the habit of comparing Integer
wrapper objects (or similar) using ==
. In one case ==
may be true
if you compare two instances of "20". In the other case, it is guaranteed to be false
.
The lesson: use .equals(...)
to compare wrapper types not ==
.
On the question of which to use:
- If
i
is int
, use the first form.
- If
i
is Integer
, the second form is best ... unless you need an object that is !=
to other instances. Boxing (or explicitly calling valueOf
) reduces the amount of object allocation for small values, and is a worthwhile optimization.