Reputation: 719
I have the following code in Java :
class Boxing
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
short s = 10;
Integer iRef = s;
}
}
Why does it produce an error in compilation? If I explicitly typecast the short to an integer in the expression, it compiles successfully. Since I'm using a short in an expression isn't the type of that supposed to be an integer by default without requiring the explicit case?
Upvotes: 11
Views: 24443
Reputation: 9220
Java attempts to perform auto-widening, then auto-boxing, then auto-upcasting, but will not perform two of these for the same assignment. This is explained and diagrammed here, for the related case of method parameter assignment.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 74
In the code considered.
class Boxing
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
short s = 10;
Integer iRef = s;
}
}
Integer extends java.lang.Number. And java.lang.Short also extends java.lang.Number. But Short and Integer are not directly related if you wanted you can run the following program.
class Boxing
{
public static void main(String args[])
{
short s = 10;
Number iRef = s;
}
}
It will run without producing any error.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1405
Boxing conversion converts expressions of primitive type to corresponding expressions of reference type. Specifically, the following nine conversions are called the boxing conversions:
From type boolean to type Boolean
From type byte to type Byte
From type short to type Short
From type char to type Character
From type int to type Integer
From type long to type Long
From type float to type Float
From type double to type Double
From the null type to the null type
Reference: Conversions and Promotions Reference
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 7347
Here´s the documentation from JLS 5.1.7
Boxing conversion converts expressions of primitive type to corresponding expressions of reference type. Specifically, the following nine conversions are called the boxing conversions:
From type boolean to type Boolean
From type byte to type Byte
From type short to type Short
From type char to type Character
From type int to type Integer
From type long to type Long
From type float to type Float
From type double to type Double
From the null type to the null type
Basicly the direct conversion from short
to Integer
is not part of the autoboxing process of Java
.
The autoboxing, as provided above, is only able to implicity cast the representing primitive type to it´s representing Wrapper class. Since this is not the case it will cause a compile time error.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 262504
You want to have two things happening here: widening and auto-boxing.
Unfortunately, Java does only one of the two automatically. The reason for that is most likely that autoboxing was introduced fairly late (in Java5), and they had to be careful to not break existing code.
You can do
int is = s; // widening
Short sRef = s; // autoboxing
Integer iRef = (int) s; // explicit widening, then autoboxing
Upvotes: 18