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for a long while, i have been trying to get a piece of code to work, and it just is not possible. the class i have requires a generic which i have set to Integer. so i tried the follwoing:

public class a<T> //set generics for this function
{
    private T A;
    protected boolean d;

    public a(final T A)
    {
        this.A = A;

        //do calculations
        //since constructor cannot return a value, pass to another function.
        this.d = retnData(Integer.parseInt(A.toString()) != 100); //convert to an integer, the backwards way.
    }
    private boolean retnData(boolean test)
    {
        return test;
    }
}
// IN ANOTHER CLASS
transient a<Integer> b;
boolean c = b.d = b.a(25); // throws an erorr: (Int) is not apporpriate for a<Integer>.a

Java will not allow this since java sees that int != Integer, even though both accept the same data. and because of the way generics works i cannot set a b; because of the primitiveness of the type int. Even casting to an Integer does not work, as it still throws the "type error"

finnaly, i have to ask if there is some sort of work around for this, or is it futile to try and get this to work?

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  • 3
    It would help a lot if you didn't go out of your way to obfuscate the code each and every person that wants to help you now needs to deobfuscate. Oct 11, 2012 at 19:16

3 Answers 3

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You are trying to explicitly call a constructor as an instance method. This cannot be done in Java.

Perhaps you want:

transient a<Integer> b = new a<Integer>(25);
boolean c = b.d;

However, since d is declared to be protected, that will only work if this code is in another class derived from a or in the same package.

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2

Use

final a<Integer> b = new a<Integer>(10); 
boolean c = b.d;

int can be explicitly converted to Integer with new Integer(10) or Integer.valueOf(10)

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  • Prefer Integer.valueOf(x) to the Integer constructor. (In particular, it's guaranteed to cache the Integer object for 25.) Oct 11, 2012 at 19:01
  • You can always pass an int to a method that expects an Integer.
    – assylias
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:02
  • a(Integer) is a constructor. You can't call b.a, regardless of whether you pass an int or an Integer.
    – Ted Hopp
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:03
  • @LouisWasserman actually in simple use cases new Integer() is much faster due to inlining. Oct 11, 2012 at 19:06
  • @Ted Hopp Yup, you are absolutely right, I didnt look at code. He called constructor directly instead of something like final a<Integer> b = new a<Integer>(10);
    – Igor
    Oct 11, 2012 at 19:13
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The code does not make much sense: b is an object of type a, which does not have an a method - so not sure what you expect from b.a(25);... This has nothing to do with int vs Integer...

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