This is actually related to a question I asked earlier, but I was left hanging on this detail. I'm restricted to Java 1.4 and I want to cast an int type to Object. Do I really need to use an Integer class object or there's a way to cast it directly (there's no auto-boxing in 1.4). Is the cost of this "manual boxing" worthwhile over importing a whole class from the 3rd layer to the 1st layer, thus increasing coupling?
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There is no simple way to convert a primitive to its Object-based twin in Java 1.4 but there is a slow and a fast way. In Java 5, you don't need as much code but internally, the compiler will insert a call to |
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You cannot cast an int to an Object, because it is not an Object. Java distinguishes between primitive types and reference types. An int is a primitive type. So are boolean, byte, char, short, long, float and double. A value of reference type is a reference to some object. "Object" is the root class of all objects. |
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You cannot "cast" an int to Object. You will need to create an instance of Integer. But not even Java 5 will cast an Actually it does not "cast" it, it merely creates an instance of Integer (or call Integer.valuOf() for the other direction) |
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