Exist so many way which preferred before it. But for maintain better compatibility, performance and avoiding runtime exceptions (such as NullPointerException) use best practices which is
For String
@Override
public int compareTo(OtherObject o) {
return String.CASE_INSENSITIVE_ORDER.compare(this.name,o.name);
}
For int, double float (to avoid boxing and unboxing which issue for performance use below comparators)
// with functional expression
Comparator.compareInt, Comparator.compareDouble, Comparator.compareFloat
// or with static compare method
/**
* Integer
*/
public int compareTo(Integer anotherInteger) {
return compare(this.value, anotherInteger.value);
}
/**
* Double
*/
public int compareTo(Double anotherDouble) {
return Double.compare(value, anotherDouble.value);
}
/**
* Float
*/
public int compareTo(Float anotherFloat) {
return Float.compare(value, anotherFloat.value);
}
/**
* Objects
*/
public int compareTo(Object other) {
return Object.compare(value, other.value);
}
[Effective Java Item 14: Consider implement Comparable]
Finally, whenever you implement a value class that has a sensible ordering, you should have a class implements Comparable interface so that its instances can be easily sorted, searched and used in comparison-based collections. When comparing field values in the implementations of the compareTo methods, avoid the use of the < and > operators. Instead, use the static compare methods in the boxed primitive classes or the comparator construction methods in the Comparator interface
String
implementsComparable<String>
...