Issue
Given the following:
Integer var1 = null;
Integer var2 = 4;
Integer result = var1 + var2; // throws NullPointerException
The requirement for my use case is that result
should be null
whenever either operand is null
(and the same applies for other operators). I know I can use an if
statement to do this but is there a smarter way?
Solution
The best way is not to use Boxed types for normal arithmetic operations. Use primitive types instead.
Only if you are using them in the collections somewhere you should resort to Boxed types.
EDIT:
Incorporating the suggestion from @Ingo there is a good utility class Optional
in Guava, which explains on how to avoid nulls.
Now use of this class makes it explicit that the value can be null
.
Answered By - Narendra Pathai
Answer Checked By - Gilberto Lyons (JavaFixing Admin)