the biggest difference I see between long and Long in this context is that Long may be null. If there's a possibility you might have missing values the Long object will be helpful as the null can indicate missing values. If you're using primitives you'll have to use some special value to indicate missing, which is probably going to be a mess. Speed or size is not likely to be an issue unless you're planning on making an array of a million of these things and then serializing. (When to use Long vs long in java?)
In truth, there is no practical reason. Except that int
is a primitive, long
is a primitive, but Long
is not.
I suggest you use Long.valueOf()
So like this:
Long longValue = Long.valueOf(InsertIntHere);
Object
to its primitive type.boxedLong = (long)i
.