I'm editing this question to differentiate it from this one, and to remove the dreaded "why?"
If I have a java method that returns the java object Integer
, the java compiler allow me to assign that to a primitive int
. This seems to be asking for runtime trouble. ie. what if Integer is null?
public class SomeClass {
private Integer someIntegerObject;
public Integer getSomeIntegerObject() {
return this.someIntegerObject;
}
}
SomeClass someClass = new SomeClass();
//much later...
int someIntegerPrimative = someClass.someIntegerObject();
This will blow up at runtime if someIntegerObject
was set to null at all, but it seems like something that could easily be caught at compile time.
This functionality is called "unboxing" and its opposite is "auto-boxing". It is intended to save the developer time and readability from unboxing each of these manually.
The question is: what are the best strategies for catching potential issues here at compile-time?
int
is a NullPointerException which is an unchecked exception to make matters even worse. With a sign of relief, I'm back to C++.NullPointerExceptions
are a major flaw in general. But if you're going to say "back to c++" then I will leave you with the wordssegmentation fault
and be done with it.