Recently I stumbled over code where people write stuff like
Long myLong = Long.valueOf(42);
// instead of
Long myLong = 42L;
I have no clue why one would do this, except for personal taste regarding readability.
Am I missing something?
with direct assignment you are required to cast if assigning int
to Long
(int
to primitive long
is implicit) and they get autoboxed
automatically using Long.valueOf
Long myLong1 = Long.valueOf(42);
Long myLong2 = Long.valueOf(42L);
Long myLong3 = 42L;
Long myLong4 = (long) 42;
otherwise they are all same See bytecode output from javap
public static void main(java.lang.String[]);
Code:
0: ldc2_w #16 // long 42l
3: invokestatic #18 // Method java/lang/Long.valueOf:(J)Ljava/lang/Long;
6: astore_1
7: ldc2_w #16 // long 42l
10: invokestatic #18 // Method java/lang/Long.valueOf:(J)Ljava/lang/Long;
13: astore_2
14: ldc2_w #16 // long 42l
17: invokestatic #18 // Method java/lang/Long.valueOf:(J)Ljava/lang/Long;
20: astore_3
21: ldc2_w #16 // long 42l
24: invokestatic #18 // Method java/lang/Long.valueOf:(J)Ljava/lang/Long;
27: astore 4
29: return
However using new Long(42L)
should be avoided if not absolutely necessary and one of above statement needs to be used in favor of this as valueOf
methods normally cache a range of values (FlyWeight Design Pattern
) by JVM internally
Trivia: In case of integers & Oracle JVM the range can be controlled using -XX:AutoBoxCacheMax=
The snippet
Long myLong = 42L;
is internally the same as
Long myLong = Long.valueOf(42);
The compiler will generate the same bytecode.
I also think it's a reminder of java before java5, where there was no autoboxing, and where
Long l = 42L;
could not be compiled.
They are equivalent, compiler will build the same bytecode for both
valueOf
takes a primitive long
. For literals, I'd agree that 42L
is better, but if you have an int
or long
variable, Long.valueOf
is a good way to get a Long
. valueOf
also uses a cache of values from -128 to 127, which gives it a slight performance edge over new Long(long)
for common values.
Long myLong = myPrimitiveLong;
)
Long
, like Long.valueOf(myPrimitive).compareTo(otherPrimitive)
; or for some other reason you want a Long
without necessarily assigning it to a primitive.
People who don't realize you can do it the other way?
I have to wonder if the compiler is smart enough to convert the Long.valueOf to the same bytecode, for constant calls. Otherwise there would be a tiny performance hit (not significant, but you might notice it heavily-run, tight loops).
The valueOf version is useful for casting primitive values safely, handy if you're doing a bunch of casts between primitive types and don't want to (for example) cause problems doing: (int)longBiggerThanIntCanHandle
(You wouldn't care about doing (long)intValue, but if you're doing a bunch of conversions both ways, it's good to use valueOf as a convention, for safety.)
42L
syntax.new Integer()
, but its suggestion is to usevalueOf()
instead. So I see a lot of people usevalueOf()
...