6

Firstly, my question is about how the primitive type int is able to be converted into a String without being an Object, so not having a toString() method to get the String value.

I'm well aware of how you're able to seemingly 'convert' a variable of the primitive type int to a String in Java. The most simple way I use is:

int x = 5;
String y = "" + x;

This works very well, however my question is the following:

Due to the primitive type int not being an Object, therefore not having any methods such as the toString() method which to my knowledge is required in order to get a String value of a variable... How is the value of the variable recognised without this fundamental method?

3
  • 1
    This was already possible before auto-boxing existed. It is just built into the language I would say. Feb 25, 2016 at 16:06
  • So is an int converted into an Integer object which has the toString() method enabling it to be recognised as a String via auto-boxing?
    – Nathangrad
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:08
  • 1
    See rgettman's answer. It is converted but it is not strictly speaking autoboxing. Feb 25, 2016 at 16:11

3 Answers 3

11

This is called string conversion. The JLS, Section 5.1.11, states:

Any type may be converted to type String by string conversion.

A value x of primitive type T is first converted to a reference value as if by giving it as an argument to an appropriate class instance creation expression (§15.9):

(other types)

  • If T is byte, short, or int, then use new Integer(x).

This reference value is then converted to type String by string conversion.

Now only reference values need to be considered:

  • If the reference is null, it is converted to the string "null" (four ASCII characters n, u, l, l).

  • Otherwise, the conversion is performed as if by an invocation of the toString method of the referenced object with no arguments; but if the result of invoking the toString method is null, then the string "null" is used instead.

So, the int is converted to an Integer, not by boxing conversion, but by new Integer(x), then toString() is called on it.

It's technically not a boxing conversion; string conversion has been in the language since the beginning of Java, where boxing conversions were added in Java 1.5.

4
  • In reality, the exact logic described by the JLS is not applied. Instead, string conversion is implemented by calling String.valueOf(), which has overloads to take care of the primitive values. The implementation doesn't actually create an instance of Integer, which is ok, because the result is the same as if it had.
    – Andreas
    Feb 25, 2016 at 17:05
  • @Andreas the JLS does state "as if", so technically it's not required to create a new Integer, but what proves that it's generating the calls you state in your answer?
    – rgettman
    Feb 25, 2016 at 17:10
  • Hmmm, yeah, I can't seem to find any examples for String.valueOf() being used for string conversion, although the methods are implementing string conversion to the specification. All the examples in the JLS are for string concatenation. As for that, disassembling the bytecode is proof that StringBuilder.append() is used.
    – Andreas
    Feb 25, 2016 at 17:53
  • Checking the callers of valueOf(int) shows that they are used by the print(int) methods of PrintStream and PrintWriter, which makes sense.
    – Andreas
    Feb 25, 2016 at 18:00
4

In general, an int value is converted to String by calling one of these two methods:

For other primitive values, the corresponding overload of either of these methods are used.

StringBuilder.append()

The expression "" + x is implemented by the compiler as:

new StringBuilder().append("").append(x).toString()

With x being declared as int, that means that the overload of append() that takes an int parameter will be called.

The source (Java 1.8.0_65) for append(int) is:

@Override
public StringBuilder append(int i) {
    super.append(i);
    return this;
}

The super call leads to:

public AbstractStringBuilder append(int i) {
    if (i == Integer.MIN_VALUE) {
        append("-2147483648");
        return this;
    }
    int appendedLength = (i < 0) ? Integer.stringSize(-i) + 1
                                 : Integer.stringSize(i);
    int spaceNeeded = count + appendedLength;
    ensureCapacityInternal(spaceNeeded);
    Integer.getChars(i, spaceNeeded, value);
    count = spaceNeeded;
    return this;
}

String.valueOf()

When converting a value to a String without using string concatenation, it is generally done by calling String.valueOf(). For an int value that means valueOf(int):

public static String valueOf(int i) {
    return Integer.toString(i);
}

The Integer.toString() call is:

public static String toString(int i) {
    if (i == Integer.MIN_VALUE)
        return "-2147483648";
    int size = (i < 0) ? stringSize(-i) + 1 : stringSize(i);
    char[] buf = new char[size];
    getChars(i, size, buf);
    return new String(buf, true);
}

Integer.getChars()

As you can see, both do it by actually calling the package-private method Integer.getChars(int i, int index, char[] buf).

Neither of them actually creates an instance of Integer, even though the JLS implies it would.

1

You can use valueOf method for static String for primitive types, such as int, double, float. Some code:

int intValue  = 25;
String s = String.valueOf(intValue);
6
  • I'm aware of the valueOf() method for String objects. My question was how is the value of the primitive type int recognised due to the lack of a toString() method. But thank you for your response.
    – Nathangrad
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:18
  • @Nathangrad It is recognized by the overloads of String.valueOf(), which means valueOf(int) when the value is an int. In your listed case ("" + x), it is however recognized by the overloads of StringBuilder.append(), meaning append(int).
    – Andreas
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:28
  • @Andreas Are you suggesting that the StringBuilder.append() method is implied when I use a primitive type such as int alongside a String in order to get it's String value?
    – Nathangrad
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:31
  • 1
    @Nathangrad I am saying that "" + x is converted to new StringBuilder().append("").append(x).toString() by the compiler. If you disassemble the bytecode using javap -c Xxx.class, you'll see that. It is how the Java compiler implements string concatenation.
    – Andreas
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:33
  • @Andreas Regardless of what the compiler converts it to, the value of x still needs to be obtained by the StringBuilder.append() method. I was trying to understand how the value of x is retrieved from methods without having a toString() method invoked on it due to it not being an object.
    – Nathangrad
    Feb 25, 2016 at 16:38

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