I want to check if an object o is an instance of the class c or of a subclass of c. For instance, if p is of class Point I want x.instanceOf(Point.class) to be true and also x.instanceOf(Object.class) to be true. I want it to work also for boxed primitive types. For instance, if x is an Integer then x.instanceOf(Integer.class) should be true. Is there such a thing? If not, how can I implement such a method?
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Class.isInstance does what you want.
Of course, you shouldn't use it if you could use | |||
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Um... What? What are o, p and x?
No. It shouldn't even compile. Primitives are not objects, and you cannot call methods on them. Anyway, there are three things, one of which can definitely achieve what you want (they differ somewhat in where exactly the apply:
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you just have to use the right syntax for primitve types, you have to do it completely different. Since you cannot create methods for them , you need a class that keeps the method. So instead of "x.instanceOf(Integer.Class)", you have to call "MyClassComparer.instanceOf(x, Integer.Class)" or something like that. This could easily be implemented by overloading methods, but I fail to see a case when that functionality would be desireable at all. | ||||
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In fact in Java there's a boolean operator called instanceof which can be used to determine if an object is an instance of a class, an instance of a subclass, or an instance of a class that implements a particular interface.
The Java Tutorial has a good example of this operator | |||||||||
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You can do:
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"I want it to work also for primitive types. For instance, if x is an integer then x.instanceOf(Integer.class) and also x.instanceOf(Object.class) should be true." Why? Primitive types and reference types are completely separate. A primitive int is not a subtype of Integer nor Object. The type of a primitive value is always known statically at compile time, so there is no point in testing its type. Sure, you can box a primitive value and then test its type:
But what would be the point? | |||
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