I saw in the source of the Boolean class the following:
public static final Boolean FALSE = new Boolean(false);
Hence, if I understand correctly the field FALSE
in the Boolean
class is a Boolean
itself which has its boolean
field set to false
.
Now I wonder if the following two statements are truly equivalent.
Boolean myBool = new Boolean(false);
and
Boolean myBool = Boolean.FALSE;
I would assume that in the first case a new Boolean object is constructed and the myBool reference points to it, whereas in the second case we actually make a copy of the reference to the Boolean.FALSE object - is this correct?
And if so what does this difference really mean?
Last but not least the actual question: Which of the two options should I prefer and why?
Boolean.FALSE
. This conforms to the future updates which JDK may be having.Boolean.valueOf()
is preferrable tonew Boolean()
in general.false
and let the compiler sort it out via autoboxing.