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I am reading the specification of the Java language, about the conversions of Assignments and I was trying to obtain the basic rules and there is some literature that confuses me a lot. There are some publications that say:

 Integer s11 = (short)7;

require a widening primitive conversion followed by a boxing conversion. This is not a permitted conversion. I understand the compilation error and the contexts of the assignments. But really is a widening primitive conversion? I understand as follow: Integer <- Short <- short <- int I see the widening between Integer and Short. or am I confused?

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    It's not: Integer <- Short <- short <- int, it's: Integer <- int <- short <- int and the widening is: int <- short
    – Nir Alfasi
    Jan 4, 2018 at 7:34

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A widening primitive conversion is a conversion from one primitive type to another primitive type. In your example, the required widening primitive conversion is from short to int.

That widening primitive conversion is required in order for the following boxing conversion (from int to Integer) to be possible.

If you break the expression into two assignments, the type conversions would be clearer:

int s11 = (short)7; // widening primitive conversion from short to int
Integer i11 = s11; // boxing conversion from int to Integer
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yes it is widening followed by auto-boxing, i.e. int <- short followed by Integer <- int

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