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.