6

I have a question: I work in environment of Eclipse.

Sometimes the computer does not give to the following casting:

int a ... 
Object ans = (int) a;

But only this conversion:

int a ...
Object ans = (Integer) a;

I understand why you can do the casting between Object to Integer, but why primitive variable - there are times when you can, and there are times you can not do a casting?

Thank you

I am attaching the code which the compiler not let me make casting between int variable to object:

/** @return minimum element */
    public Object minimum(){
        return minimum(this.root);
    }
    public Object minimum(BSTNode node){
        if (node.left != null) return minimum(node.left);
        return node.data;
    }
        /** @return maximum element */  
    public Object maximum(){
        return maximum(this.root);
    }
    public Object maximum(BSTNode node){
        if (node.right != null) return maximum(node.right);
        return node.data;
    }

    public Object findNearestSmall(Object elem) {
        int diff;
        diff = (int)maximum() - (int)minimum();
        if (compare(minimum(), elem) == 0) return elem;
        else return findNearestSmall(elem, this.root, diff);
    }   
    public Object findNearestSmall(Object elem, BSTNode node, int mindiff){
           if(node == null) return (int)elem - mindiff;

           int diff = (int)elem - (int)node.data;

           if(diff > 0 && mindiff > diff) mindiff = diff;
           /* Case 2 : Look for in left subtree */
           if(compare(node.data, elem)>-1)
                   return findNearestSmall(elem, node.left, mindiff);
           else
           /* Case 3 : Look for in right subtree */ 
                   return findNearestSmall(elem, node.right, mindiff);
    }

6 Answers 6

15

Before Java 1.5, you couldn't even do this:

int a;
...
Object x = (Integer) a;

The compiler would complain that a is of a primitive data type, and therefore cannot be cast to an object.

Starting with Java 1.5, Java introduced the concept of automatic boxing. So, the following became OK:

int a;
...
Object x = (Integer) a;

Because the compiler knows how to convert from a primitive int to the boxed type Integer automatically; and from Integer to an Object it's, well, not a problem.

However, what you're trying to do:

int a;
...
Object x = (int) a;

Is basically telling the compiler to avoid boxing. You explicitly tell the compiler to leave a as an int, and put a reference to that int into an Object. The compiler isn't designed to deal with such a case.

5
  • 1
    Autoboxing was introduced in 1.5 Jun 9, 2014 at 6:58
  • But What is interesting is that my friend has the same workspace(Not the same version), and in my friend's computer - the compiler does not complain (exactly the same code that I sent here)
    – ZoharYosef
    Jun 9, 2014 at 7:05
  • @ZoharYosef what JDK does your friend use? what level?
    – Isaac
    Jun 9, 2014 at 7:08
  • @Isaac my JDK is 1.8.0. I have to ask my friend what he had. p.s. thank you very much, you have a Clear and good explanation
    – ZoharYosef
    Jun 9, 2014 at 7:15
  • @ZoharYosef another thing to look out for is Eclipse settings. It's quite possible that your workspace is configured to give an error in such a case, and in your friend's workspace it's configured to forgive. Look at workspace -> preferences -> Java -> Compiler -> Errors/Warnings. Enjoy the Hummus in Tel Aviv. Shalom
    – Isaac
    Jun 9, 2014 at 7:22
3

You cannot cast from a referenced data-type to a primitive data-type i.e. you cannot:

 Object x = (int)a;  

You can however do:

 Object x = (Integer)a;  

because Integer is a class and int is a primitive data-type.
If I assume it correctly, the functionality you want to achieve is get the integer's value from Object x which can be done as:

 Object x = (Integer)a;  
 //Do something and somewhere else  
 int z = ((Integer)x).intValue();  

This may through a ClassCastException if it is not of Integer class.

0

You should look into the difference between int which is a primitive type, and Integer, which is a wrapper class in Java.

0

An Integer is also an Object and stays as an Object on the Heap.

An int is a primitive type. It is NOT an Object. An Object has its own state and behavioral properties, int doesn't have those. So you get a compilation error when trying to convert an Object to a primitive. On the other hand, Converting an int to Object is possible because of Autoboxing

4
  • 2
    So you get a compilation error when trying to convert primitive to Object or vice-verse I wouldn't say this this is true. The compiler will autobox the conversion for you. The issue is with the cast to int. Jun 9, 2014 at 6:59
  • @BoristheSpider - My bad.. Changed the answer. Thanks.. :) Jun 9, 2014 at 7:09
  • All primitives are auto(un)boxed to/from their wrapper classes. int <-> Integer is not a special case. Jun 9, 2014 at 8:15
  • @BoristheSpider - Yes. But you cannot cast Objects to primitives. And converting primitives to Object(not their wrappers, int<->Object) directly is not good either. Jun 9, 2014 at 8:22
0

But I am able to execute the following code. I am using jdk 1.6 and the following code is not throwing me any errors or runtime exceptions.

    int i=5;

    Object test = (int)i;

    System.out.println(test.getClass());

Output: class java.lang.Integer

2
  • Could someone help me understand how java handles this conversion internally. Thanks in advance.
    – raja
    Jan 28, 2015 at 4:56
  • Sorry I am new here. yeah I have raised a seperate question.
    – raja
    Jan 29, 2015 at 7:34
-1
  • int is a primitive type.

    Way of declaration: int a = 5;

  • Integer is a wrapper class (it extends Object).

    Way of declaration: Integer a = new Integer(5);


When you write

Integer a = 5;

compiler automatically converts it to

Integer a = new Integer(5);

This feature is called Autoboxing (since Java 5.0)


  • int can not be casted to Object as it is not a referenced data type (object) at all.
  • But it can be casted to other primitive types.
  • On the other hand, Integer can be casted to Object.

When you write

Object ans = (Integer) a;

compiler does autoboxing and then casts it.

Object ans = (int) a;

gives a compiler error because the cast to int is successful, but it can not be assigned to an Object reference.

Hope this helps.
Good luck.

2
  • This is an incorrect over-simplification of the issue. new Integer is not called and you should never declare an Integer with new Integer. Jun 9, 2014 at 7:06
  • Integer class does use a facade of Integer objects behind the scene for -127 to 128. I think mentioning this would increase the complexity unnecessarily. Thank you for the feedback though. Jun 9, 2014 at 7:09

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