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Every variable must have a data type. A variable's data type determines the values that the variable can contain and the operations that can be performed on it. For example, in theMaxVariablesDemoprogram, the declaration
int largestIntegerdeclares thatlargestIntegerhas an integer data type (int). Integers can contain only integral values (both positive and negative). You can perform arithmetic operations, such as addition, on integer variables.The Java programming language has two categories of data types: primitive and reference
. A variable of primitive type contains a single value of the appropriate size and format for its type: a number, a character, or a boolean value. For example, an integer value is 32 bits of data in a format known as two's complement, the value of a
charis 16 bits of data formatted as a Unicode character, and so on.The following table lists, by keyword, all of the primitive data types supported by Java, their sizes and formats, and a brief description of each. The
MaxVariablesDemoprogram declares one variable of each primitive type.Primitive Data Types
Keyword Description Size/Format (integers) byteByte-length integer 8-bit two's complement shortShort integer 16-bit two's complement intInteger 32-bit two's complement longLong integer 64-bit two's complement (real numbers) floatSingle-precision floating point 32-bit IEEE 754 doubleDouble-precision floating point 64-bit IEEE 754 (other types) charA single character 16-bit Unicode character booleanA boolean value ( trueorfalse)true or false
Purity Tip: In other languages, the format and size of primitive data types may depend on the platform on which a program is running. In contrast, the Java programming language specifies the size and format of its primitive data types. Hence, you don't have to worry about system-dependencies.You can put a literal primitive value directly in your code. For example, if you need to assign the value 4 to an integer variable you can write this:
The digit 4 is a literal integer value. Here are some examples of literal values of various primitive types:int anInt = 4;Examples of Literal Values and Their Data Types
Literal Data Type 178 int8864L long37.266double37.266D double87.363Ffloat26.77e3 double' c'chartruebooleanfalsebooleanGenerally speaking, a series of digits with no decimal point is typed as an integer. You can specify a long integer by putting an
'L'or'l'after the number.'L'is preferred as it cannot be confused with the digit'1'. A series of digits with a decimal point is of type double. You can specify a float by putting an'f'or'F'after the number. A literal character value is any single Unicode character between single quote marks. The two boolean literals are simplytrueandfalse.Arrays, classes, and interfaces are reference
types. The value of a reference type variable, in contrast to that of a primitive type, is a reference to (an address of) the value or set of values represented by the variable.
A reference is called a pointer, or a memory address in other languages. The Java programming language does not support the explicit use of addresses like other languages do. You use the variable's name instead.
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