Primitive wrapper class

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A primitive wrapper class in the Java programming language is one of eight classes provided in the java.lang package to provide object methods for the eight primitive types. All of the primitive wrapper classes in Java are immutable. J2SE 5.0 introduced autoboxing of primitive types into their wrapper object, and automatic unboxing of the wrapper objects into their primitive value—the implicit conversion between the wrapper objects and primitive values.

Wrapper classes are used to represent primitive values when an Object is required. The wrapper classes are used extensively with Collection classes in the java.util package and with the classes in the java.lang.reflect reflection package.

The primitive wrapper classes and their corresponding primitive types are:

Primitive type Wrapper class
byte Byte
short Short
int Integer
long Long
float Float
double Double
char Character
boolean Boolean

The Byte, Short, Integer, Long, Float, and Double wrapper classes are all subclasses of the Number class.

[edit] Void

Although it is not a wrapper class, the Void class is similar in that it provides an object representation of the void return type. The Void class is an uninstantiable placeholder class used by the java.lang.reflect API to hold a reference to the Class object representing the Java keyword void.

[edit] Atomic wrapper classes

With Java 5.0, additional wrapper classes were introduced in the java.util.concurrent.atomic package. These classes are mutable and cannot be used as a replacement for the regular wrapper classes. Instead, they provide atomic operations for addition, increment and assignment.

The atomic wrapper classes and their corresponding primitive types are:

Primitive type Wrapper class
int AtomicInteger
long AtomicLong
boolean AtomicBoolean
V AtomicReference<V>

The AtomicInteger and AtomicLong classes are subclasses of the Number class. The AtomicReference class accepts the type parameter V that specifies the type of the object reference. (See "Generics in Java" for a description of type parameters in Java.) Note that while an object type is not a primitive type, an object reference is.

[edit] See also

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