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I'm studying the book for the JAVA OCA certification. I'm in the chapter of binary operator. The book mentions the following rule.

byte, short and char will be promoted to int when they use binary operators.

So, at the moment, if I define and initialize a variable of type short or byte it will be automatically converted to int. In the book, it says = assignment is a binary operator.

Is there any point of using these kind of variables?

How can I print this type of variable in java?

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    Probably be the duplicate question click here Apr 1, 2016 at 4:44
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    byte a = -1 is not converted to an int. It's promoted to an int if you use a binary operator (or arithmetic operator); byte b = a + (byte)1; // < --int Apr 1, 2016 at 4:45
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    Assignment is not really a binary operator. Either the book is confusing, or you read it wrong.
    – ajb
    Apr 1, 2016 at 5:11
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    @Vin Please be careful about editing when there's a quote involved. If the OP says that a book says "assignment is a binary operator", then you really should not make a major change, such as changing to "operation", unless you know what book he's talking about and know what it says.
    – ajb
    Apr 1, 2016 at 5:14
  • @ajb I have just edited the post to remove 'Thanks. The said edit has been done by another user. You may rollback if you think it conflicts with OP's intent.
    – Vin
    Apr 1, 2016 at 5:17

2 Answers 2

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Such variables would not be converted to int whenever you define them. They will be promoted to int when using them together with a binary operator like the & operator. Get class name of an object by using:

variablename.getClass().getName()

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Given an instance of any object, you can call its getClass() method to get an instance of the Class object that describe the type of the object.

Using the Class object, you can easily print its type name:

Integer number=Integer.valueOf(15);
System.out.println(number.getClass().getName());
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