Dynamically find the class that represents a primitive Java type

2022-08-31 19:53:29

I need to make some reflective method calls in Java. Those calls will include methods that have arguments that are primitive types (int, double, etc.). The way to specify such types when looking up the method reflectively is int.class, double.class, etc.

The challenge is that I am accepting input from an outside source that will specify the types dynamically. Therefore, I need to come up with these Class references dynamically as well. Imagine a delimited file a list of method names with lists of parameter types:

doSomething int double
doSomethingElse java.lang.String boolean

If the input was something like , I know I could use to that Class instance back. Is there any way to use that method, or another, to get the primitive type Classes back?java.lang.StringClass.forName("java.lang.String")

Edit: Thanks to all the respondents. It seems clear that there is no built-in way to cleanly do what I want, so I will settle for reusing the class from the Spring framework. It seems to contain a replacement for Class.forName() that will work with my requirements.ClassUtils


答案 1

The instances for the primitive types are obtainable as you said using e.g. , but it is also possible to get the same values using something like . Each primitive wrapper class contains a static field, , which has the corresponding primitive class instance.Classint.classInteger.TYPETYPE

You cannot obtain the primitive class via , but you can get it from a class which is readily available. If you absolutely must use reflection, you can try something like this:forName

Class clazz = Class.forName("java.lang.Integer");
Class intClass = clazz.getField("TYPE").get(null);

intClass.equals(int.class);         // => true

答案 2

The Spring framework contains a utility class ClassUtils which contains the static method forName. This method can be used for the exact purpose you described.

In case you don’t like to have a dependency on Spring: the source code of the method can be found e. g. here on their public repository. The class source code is licensed under the Apache 2.0 model.

Note however that the algorithm uses a hard-coded map of primitive types.


Edit: Thanks to commenters Dávid Horváth and Patrick for pointing out the broken link.