It depends on what you want to do. This code swaps two elements of an array.
void swap(int i, int j, int[] arr) {
int t = arr[i];
arr[i] = arr[j];
arr[j] = t;
}
Something like this swaps the content of two int[]
of equal length.
void swap(int[] arr1, int[] arr2) {
int[] t = arr1.clone();
System.arraycopy(arr2, 0, arr1, 0, t.length);
System.arraycopy(t, 0, arr2, 0, t.length);
}
Something like this swaps the content of two BitSet
(using the XOR swap algorithm):
void swap(BitSet s1, BitSet s2) {
s1.xor(s2);
s2.xor(s1);
s1.xor(s2);
}
Something like this swaps the x
and y
fields of some Point
class:
void swapXY(Point p) {
int t = p.x;
p.x = p.y;
p.y = t;
}
setValue
method, you could use that method instead of assignment and that would have the desired effect (unless you also want the object identity to change), but since there's not, using Integer won't help a bit.