Integer wrapper class and == operator - where is behavior specified? [duplicate]
Integer integer1 = 127;
Integer integer2 = 127;
System.out.println(integer1 == integer2);//true
integer1 = 128;
integer2 = 128;
System.out.println(integer1 == integer2);//false
I found it returns == (if it is) under the range of -128 - 127
, why is there such specification ?
Solution 1:
Because of this code in Integer.valueOf(int)
:
public static Integer valueOf(int i) {
if(i >= -128 && i <= IntegerCache.high)
return IntegerCache.cache[i + 128];
else
return new Integer(i);
}
Explanation:
Integer integer1 = 127
is a shortcut for Integer integer1 = Integer.valueOf(127)
, and for values between -128 and 127 (inclusive), the Integers are put in a cache and returned multiple times, while higher and lower numbers generate new Integers each time.
Solution 2:
==
will return true if it's the exact same object. Boxing integers in Java 'intern' numbers within that that range, so any boxed version of such a number will result in the exact same object.
To get avoid this effect in comparisons, use .equals()
System.out.println(integer1.equals(integer2));