W3cubDocs

/OpenJDK 8

Class Integer

All Implemented Interfaces:
Serializable, Comparable<Integer>
public final class Integer
extends Number
implements Comparable<Integer>

The Integer class wraps a value of the primitive type int in an object. An object of type Integer contains a single field whose type is int.

In addition, this class provides several methods for converting an int to a String and a String to an int, as well as other constants and methods useful when dealing with an int.

Implementation note: The implementations of the "bit twiddling" methods (such as highestOneBit and numberOfTrailingZeros) are based on material from Henry S. Warren, Jr.'s Hacker's Delight, (Addison Wesley, 2002).

Since:
JDK1.0

Fields

MIN_VALUE

@Native
public static final int MIN_VALUE

A constant holding the minimum value an int can have, -231.

MAX_VALUE

@Native
public static final int MAX_VALUE

A constant holding the maximum value an int can have, 231-1.

TYPE

public static final Class<Integer> TYPE

The Class instance representing the primitive type int.

Since:
JDK1.1

SIZE

@Native
public static final int SIZE

The number of bits used to represent an int value in two's complement binary form.

Since:
1.5

BYTES

public static final int BYTES

The number of bytes used to represent a int value in two's complement binary form.

Since:
1.8

Constructors

Integer

public Integer(int value)

Constructs a newly allocated Integer object that represents the specified int value.

Parameters:
value - the value to be represented by the Integer object.

Integer

public Integer(String s)
        throws NumberFormatException

Constructs a newly allocated Integer object that represents the int value indicated by the String parameter. The string is converted to an int value in exactly the manner used by the parseInt method for radix 10.

Parameters:
s - the String to be converted to an Integer.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the String does not contain a parsable integer.
See Also:
parseInt(java.lang.String, int)

Methods

toString

public static String toString(int i,
                              int radix)

Returns a string representation of the first argument in the radix specified by the second argument.

If the radix is smaller than Character.MIN_RADIX or larger than Character.MAX_RADIX, then the radix 10 is used instead.

If the first argument is negative, the first element of the result is the ASCII minus character '-' ('\u002D'). If the first argument is not negative, no sign character appears in the result.

The remaining characters of the result represent the magnitude of the first argument. If the magnitude is zero, it is represented by a single zero character '0' ('\u0030'); otherwise, the first character of the representation of the magnitude will not be the zero character. The following ASCII characters are used as digits:

0123456789abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
These are '\u0030' through '\u0039' and '\u0061' through '\u007A'. If radix is N, then the first N of these characters are used as radix-N digits in the order shown. Thus, the digits for hexadecimal (radix 16) are 0123456789abcdef. If uppercase letters are desired, the String.toUpperCase() method may be called on the result:
Integer.toString(n, 16).toUpperCase()
Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to a string.
radix - the radix to use in the string representation.
Returns:
a string representation of the argument in the specified radix.
See Also:
Character.MAX_RADIX, Character.MIN_RADIX

toUnsignedString

public static String toUnsignedString(int i,
                                      int radix)

Returns a string representation of the first argument as an unsigned integer value in the radix specified by the second argument.

If the radix is smaller than Character.MIN_RADIX or larger than Character.MAX_RADIX, then the radix 10 is used instead.

Note that since the first argument is treated as an unsigned value, no leading sign character is printed.

If the magnitude is zero, it is represented by a single zero character '0' ('\u0030'); otherwise, the first character of the representation of the magnitude will not be the zero character.

The behavior of radixes and the characters used as digits are the same as toString.

Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to an unsigned string.
radix - the radix to use in the string representation.
Returns:
an unsigned string representation of the argument in the specified radix.
Since:
1.8
See Also:
toString(int, int)

toHexString

public static String toHexString(int i)

Returns a string representation of the integer argument as an unsigned integer in base 16.

The unsigned integer value is the argument plus 232 if the argument is negative; otherwise, it is equal to the argument. This value is converted to a string of ASCII digits in hexadecimal (base 16) with no extra leading 0s.

The value of the argument can be recovered from the returned string s by calling Integer.parseUnsignedInt(s, 16).

If the unsigned magnitude is zero, it is represented by a single zero character '0' ('\u0030'); otherwise, the first character of the representation of the unsigned magnitude will not be the zero character. The following characters are used as hexadecimal digits:

0123456789abcdef
These are the characters '\u0030' through '\u0039' and '\u0061' through '\u0066'. If uppercase letters are desired, the String.toUpperCase() method may be called on the result:
Integer.toHexString(n).toUpperCase()
Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to a string.
Returns:
the string representation of the unsigned integer value represented by the argument in hexadecimal (base 16).
Since:
JDK1.0.2
See Also:
parseUnsignedInt(String, int), toUnsignedString(int, int)

toOctalString

public static String toOctalString(int i)

Returns a string representation of the integer argument as an unsigned integer in base 8.

The unsigned integer value is the argument plus 232 if the argument is negative; otherwise, it is equal to the argument. This value is converted to a string of ASCII digits in octal (base 8) with no extra leading 0s.

The value of the argument can be recovered from the returned string s by calling Integer.parseUnsignedInt(s, 8).

If the unsigned magnitude is zero, it is represented by a single zero character '0' ('\u0030'); otherwise, the first character of the representation of the unsigned magnitude will not be the zero character. The following characters are used as octal digits:

01234567
These are the characters '\u0030' through '\u0037'.
Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to a string.
Returns:
the string representation of the unsigned integer value represented by the argument in octal (base 8).
Since:
JDK1.0.2
See Also:
parseUnsignedInt(String, int), toUnsignedString(int, int)

toBinaryString

public static String toBinaryString(int i)

Returns a string representation of the integer argument as an unsigned integer in base 2.

The unsigned integer value is the argument plus 232 if the argument is negative; otherwise it is equal to the argument. This value is converted to a string of ASCII digits in binary (base 2) with no extra leading 0s.

The value of the argument can be recovered from the returned string s by calling Integer.parseUnsignedInt(s, 2).

If the unsigned magnitude is zero, it is represented by a single zero character '0' ('\u0030'); otherwise, the first character of the representation of the unsigned magnitude will not be the zero character. The characters '0' ('\u0030') and '1' ('\u0031') are used as binary digits.

Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to a string.
Returns:
the string representation of the unsigned integer value represented by the argument in binary (base 2).
Since:
JDK1.0.2
See Also:
parseUnsignedInt(String, int), toUnsignedString(int, int)

toString

public static String toString(int i)

Returns a String object representing the specified integer. The argument is converted to signed decimal representation and returned as a string, exactly as if the argument and radix 10 were given as arguments to the toString(int, int) method.

Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted.
Returns:
a string representation of the argument in base 10.

toUnsignedString

public static String toUnsignedString(int i)

Returns a string representation of the argument as an unsigned decimal value. The argument is converted to unsigned decimal representation and returned as a string exactly as if the argument and radix 10 were given as arguments to the toUnsignedString(int, int) method.

Parameters:
i - an integer to be converted to an unsigned string.
Returns:
an unsigned string representation of the argument.
Since:
1.8
See Also:
toUnsignedString(int, int)

parseInt

public static int parseInt(String s,
                           int radix)
                    throws NumberFormatException

Parses the string argument as a signed integer in the radix specified by the second argument. The characters in the string must all be digits of the specified radix (as determined by whether Character.digit(char, int) returns a nonnegative value), except that the first character may be an ASCII minus sign '-' ('\u002D') to indicate a negative value or an ASCII plus sign '+' ('\u002B') to indicate a positive value. The resulting integer value is returned.

An exception of type NumberFormatException is thrown if any of the following situations occurs:

  • The first argument is null or is a string of length zero.
  • The radix is either smaller than Character.MIN_RADIX or larger than Character.MAX_RADIX.
  • Any character of the string is not a digit of the specified radix, except that the first character may be a minus sign '-' ('\u002D') or plus sign '+' ('\u002B') provided that the string is longer than length 1.
  • The value represented by the string is not a value of type int.

Examples:

parseInt("0", 10) returns 0
parseInt("473", 10) returns 473
parseInt("+42", 10) returns 42
parseInt("-0", 10) returns 0
parseInt("-FF", 16) returns -255
parseInt("1100110", 2) returns 102
parseInt("2147483647", 10) returns 2147483647
parseInt("-2147483648", 10) returns -2147483648
parseInt("2147483648", 10) throws a NumberFormatException
parseInt("99", 8) throws a NumberFormatException
parseInt("Kona", 10) throws a NumberFormatException
parseInt("Kona", 27) returns 411787
Parameters:
s - the String containing the integer representation to be parsed
radix - the radix to be used while parsing s.
Returns:
the integer represented by the string argument in the specified radix.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the String does not contain a parsable int.

parseInt

public static int parseInt(String s)
                    throws NumberFormatException

Parses the string argument as a signed decimal integer. The characters in the string must all be decimal digits, except that the first character may be an ASCII minus sign '-' ('\u002D') to indicate a negative value or an ASCII plus sign '+' ('\u002B') to indicate a positive value. The resulting integer value is returned, exactly as if the argument and the radix 10 were given as arguments to the parseInt(java.lang.String, int) method.

Parameters:
s - a String containing the int representation to be parsed
Returns:
the integer value represented by the argument in decimal.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the string does not contain a parsable integer.

parseUnsignedInt

public static int parseUnsignedInt(String s,
                                   int radix)
                            throws NumberFormatException

Parses the string argument as an unsigned integer in the radix specified by the second argument. An unsigned integer maps the values usually associated with negative numbers to positive numbers larger than MAX_VALUE. The characters in the string must all be digits of the specified radix (as determined by whether Character.digit(char, int) returns a nonnegative value), except that the first character may be an ASCII plus sign '+' ('\u002B'). The resulting integer value is returned.

An exception of type NumberFormatException is thrown if any of the following situations occurs:

  • The first argument is null or is a string of length zero.
  • The radix is either smaller than Character.MIN_RADIX or larger than Character.MAX_RADIX.
  • Any character of the string is not a digit of the specified radix, except that the first character may be a plus sign '+' ('\u002B') provided that the string is longer than length 1.
  • The value represented by the string is larger than the largest unsigned int, 232-1.
Parameters:
s - the String containing the unsigned integer representation to be parsed
radix - the radix to be used while parsing s.
Returns:
the integer represented by the string argument in the specified radix.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the String does not contain a parsable int.
Since:
1.8

parseUnsignedInt

public static int parseUnsignedInt(String s)
                            throws NumberFormatException

Parses the string argument as an unsigned decimal integer. The characters in the string must all be decimal digits, except that the first character may be an an ASCII plus sign '+' ('\u002B'). The resulting integer value is returned, exactly as if the argument and the radix 10 were given as arguments to the parseUnsignedInt(java.lang.String, int) method.

Parameters:
s - a String containing the unsigned int representation to be parsed
Returns:
the unsigned integer value represented by the argument in decimal.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the string does not contain a parsable unsigned integer.
Since:
1.8

valueOf

public static Integer valueOf(String s,
                              int radix)
                       throws NumberFormatException

Returns an Integer object holding the value extracted from the specified String when parsed with the radix given by the second argument. The first argument is interpreted as representing a signed integer in the radix specified by the second argument, exactly as if the arguments were given to the parseInt(java.lang.String, int) method. The result is an Integer object that represents the integer value specified by the string.

In other words, this method returns an Integer object equal to the value of:

new Integer(Integer.parseInt(s, radix))
Parameters:
s - the string to be parsed.
radix - the radix to be used in interpreting s
Returns:
an Integer object holding the value represented by the string argument in the specified radix.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the String does not contain a parsable int.

valueOf

public static Integer valueOf(String s)
                       throws NumberFormatException

Returns an Integer object holding the value of the specified String. The argument is interpreted as representing a signed decimal integer, exactly as if the argument were given to the parseInt(java.lang.String) method. The result is an Integer object that represents the integer value specified by the string.

In other words, this method returns an Integer object equal to the value of:

new Integer(Integer.parseInt(s))
Parameters:
s - the string to be parsed.
Returns:
an Integer object holding the value represented by the string argument.
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the string cannot be parsed as an integer.

valueOf

public static Integer valueOf(int i)

Returns an Integer instance representing the specified int value. If a new Integer instance is not required, this method should generally be used in preference to the constructor Integer(int), as this method is likely to yield significantly better space and time performance by caching frequently requested values. This method will always cache values in the range -128 to 127, inclusive, and may cache other values outside of this range.

Parameters:
i - an int value.
Returns:
an Integer instance representing i.
Since:
1.5

byteValue

public byte byteValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as a byte after a narrowing primitive conversion.

Overrides:
byteValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type byte.

shortValue

public short shortValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as a short after a narrowing primitive conversion.

Overrides:
shortValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type short.

intValue

public int intValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as an int.

Specified by:
intValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type int.

longValue

public long longValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as a long after a widening primitive conversion.

Specified by:
longValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type long.
See Also:
toUnsignedLong(int)

floatValue

public float floatValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as a float after a widening primitive conversion.

Specified by:
floatValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type float.

doubleValue

public double doubleValue()

Returns the value of this Integer as a double after a widening primitive conversion.

Specified by:
doubleValue in class Number
Returns:
the numeric value represented by this object after conversion to type double.

toString

public String toString()

Returns a String object representing this Integer's value. The value is converted to signed decimal representation and returned as a string, exactly as if the integer value were given as an argument to the toString(int) method.

Overrides:
toString in class Object
Returns:
a string representation of the value of this object in base 10.

hashCode

public int hashCode()

Returns a hash code for this Integer.

Overrides:
hashCode in class Object
Returns:
a hash code value for this object, equal to the primitive int value represented by this Integer object.
See Also:
Object.equals(java.lang.Object), System.identityHashCode(java.lang.Object)

hashCode

public static int hashCode(int value)

Returns a hash code for a int value; compatible with Integer.hashCode().

Parameters:
value - the value to hash
Returns:
a hash code value for a int value.
Since:
1.8

equals

public boolean equals(Object obj)

Compares this object to the specified object. The result is true if and only if the argument is not null and is an Integer object that contains the same int value as this object.

Overrides:
equals in class Object
Parameters:
obj - the object to compare with.
Returns:
true if the objects are the same; false otherwise.
See Also:
Object.hashCode(), HashMap

getInteger

public static Integer getInteger(String nm)

Determines the integer value of the system property with the specified name.

The first argument is treated as the name of a system property. System properties are accessible through the System.getProperty(java.lang.String) method. The string value of this property is then interpreted as an integer value using the grammar supported by decode and an Integer object representing this value is returned.

If there is no property with the specified name, if the specified name is empty or null, or if the property does not have the correct numeric format, then null is returned.

In other words, this method returns an Integer object equal to the value of:

getInteger(nm, null)
Parameters:
nm - property name.
Returns:
the Integer value of the property.
Throws:
SecurityException - for the same reasons as System.getProperty
See Also:
System.getProperty(java.lang.String), System.getProperty(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)

getInteger

public static Integer getInteger(String nm,
                                 int val)

Determines the integer value of the system property with the specified name.

The first argument is treated as the name of a system property. System properties are accessible through the System.getProperty(java.lang.String) method. The string value of this property is then interpreted as an integer value using the grammar supported by decode and an Integer object representing this value is returned.

The second argument is the default value. An Integer object that represents the value of the second argument is returned if there is no property of the specified name, if the property does not have the correct numeric format, or if the specified name is empty or null.

In other words, this method returns an Integer object equal to the value of:

getInteger(nm, new Integer(val))
but in practice it may be implemented in a manner such as:
Integer result = getInteger(nm, null);
return (result == null) ? new Integer(val) : result;
to avoid the unnecessary allocation of an Integer object when the default value is not needed.
Parameters:
nm - property name.
val - default value.
Returns:
the Integer value of the property.
Throws:
SecurityException - for the same reasons as System.getProperty
See Also:
System.getProperty(java.lang.String), System.getProperty(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)

getInteger

public static Integer getInteger(String nm,
                                 Integer val)

Returns the integer value of the system property with the specified name. The first argument is treated as the name of a system property. System properties are accessible through the System.getProperty(java.lang.String) method. The string value of this property is then interpreted as an integer value, as per the decode method, and an Integer object representing this value is returned; in summary:

  • If the property value begins with the two ASCII characters 0x or the ASCII character #, not followed by a minus sign, then the rest of it is parsed as a hexadecimal integer exactly as by the method valueOf(java.lang.String, int) with radix 16.
  • If the property value begins with the ASCII character 0 followed by another character, it is parsed as an octal integer exactly as by the method valueOf(java.lang.String, int) with radix 8.
  • Otherwise, the property value is parsed as a decimal integer exactly as by the method valueOf(java.lang.String, int) with radix 10.

The second argument is the default value. The default value is returned if there is no property of the specified name, if the property does not have the correct numeric format, or if the specified name is empty or null.

Parameters:
nm - property name.
val - default value.
Returns:
the Integer value of the property.
Throws:
SecurityException - for the same reasons as System.getProperty
See Also:
System.getProperty(java.lang.String), System.getProperty(java.lang.String, java.lang.String)

decode

public static Integer decode(String nm)
                      throws NumberFormatException

Decodes a String into an Integer. Accepts decimal, hexadecimal, and octal numbers given by the following grammar:

DecodableString:
Signopt DecimalNumeral
Signopt 0x HexDigits
Signopt 0X HexDigits
Signopt # HexDigits
Signopt 0 OctalDigits
Sign:
-
+
DecimalNumeral, HexDigits, and OctalDigits are as defined in section 3.10.1 of The Java™ Language Specification, except that underscores are not accepted between digits.

The sequence of characters following an optional sign and/or radix specifier ("0x", "0X", "#", or leading zero) is parsed as by the Integer.parseInt method with the indicated radix (10, 16, or 8). This sequence of characters must represent a positive value or a NumberFormatException will be thrown. The result is negated if first character of the specified String is the minus sign. No whitespace characters are permitted in the String.

Parameters:
nm - the String to decode.
Returns:
an Integer object holding the int value represented by nm
Throws:
NumberFormatException - if the String does not contain a parsable integer.
See Also:
parseInt(java.lang.String, int)

compareTo

public int compareTo(Integer anotherInteger)

Compares two Integer objects numerically.

Specified by:
compareTo in interface Comparable<Integer>
Parameters:
anotherInteger - the Integer to be compared.
Returns:
the value 0 if this Integer is equal to the argument Integer; a value less than 0 if this Integer is numerically less than the argument Integer; and a value greater than 0 if this Integer is numerically greater than the argument Integer (signed comparison).
Since:
1.2

compare

public static int compare(int x,
                          int y)

Compares two int values numerically. The value returned is identical to what would be returned by:

Integer.valueOf(x).compareTo(Integer.valueOf(y))
Parameters:
x - the first int to compare
y - the second int to compare
Returns:
the value 0 if x == y; a value less than 0 if x < y; and a value greater than 0 if x > y
Since:
1.7

compareUnsigned

public static int compareUnsigned(int x,
                                  int y)

Compares two int values numerically treating the values as unsigned.

Parameters:
x - the first int to compare
y - the second int to compare
Returns:
the value 0 if x == y; a value less than 0 if x < y as unsigned values; and a value greater than 0 if x > y as unsigned values
Since:
1.8

toUnsignedLong

public static long toUnsignedLong(int x)

Converts the argument to a long by an unsigned conversion. In an unsigned conversion to a long, the high-order 32 bits of the long are zero and the low-order 32 bits are equal to the bits of the integer argument. Consequently, zero and positive int values are mapped to a numerically equal long value and negative int values are mapped to a long value equal to the input plus 232.

Parameters:
x - the value to convert to an unsigned long
Returns:
the argument converted to long by an unsigned conversion
Since:
1.8

divideUnsigned

public static int divideUnsigned(int dividend,
                                 int divisor)

Returns the unsigned quotient of dividing the first argument by the second where each argument and the result is interpreted as an unsigned value.

Note that in two's complement arithmetic, the three other basic arithmetic operations of add, subtract, and multiply are bit-wise identical if the two operands are regarded as both being signed or both being unsigned. Therefore separate addUnsigned, etc. methods are not provided.

Parameters:
dividend - the value to be divided
divisor - the value doing the dividing
Returns:
the unsigned quotient of the first argument divided by the second argument
Since:
1.8
See Also:
remainderUnsigned(int, int)

remainderUnsigned

public static int remainderUnsigned(int dividend,
                                    int divisor)

Returns the unsigned remainder from dividing the first argument by the second where each argument and the result is interpreted as an unsigned value.

Parameters:
dividend - the value to be divided
divisor - the value doing the dividing
Returns:
the unsigned remainder of the first argument divided by the second argument
Since:
1.8
See Also:
divideUnsigned(int, int)

highestOneBit

public static int highestOneBit(int i)

Returns an int value with at most a single one-bit, in the position of the highest-order ("leftmost") one-bit in the specified int value. Returns zero if the specified value has no one-bits in its two's complement binary representation, that is, if it is equal to zero.

Parameters:
i - the value whose highest one bit is to be computed
Returns:
an int value with a single one-bit, in the position of the highest-order one-bit in the specified value, or zero if the specified value is itself equal to zero.
Since:
1.5

lowestOneBit

public static int lowestOneBit(int i)

Returns an int value with at most a single one-bit, in the position of the lowest-order ("rightmost") one-bit in the specified int value. Returns zero if the specified value has no one-bits in its two's complement binary representation, that is, if it is equal to zero.

Parameters:
i - the value whose lowest one bit is to be computed
Returns:
an int value with a single one-bit, in the position of the lowest-order one-bit in the specified value, or zero if the specified value is itself equal to zero.
Since:
1.5

numberOfLeadingZeros

public static int numberOfLeadingZeros(int i)

Returns the number of zero bits preceding the highest-order ("leftmost") one-bit in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value. Returns 32 if the specified value has no one-bits in its two's complement representation, in other words if it is equal to zero.

Note that this method is closely related to the logarithm base 2. For all positive int values x:

  • floor(log2(x)) = 31 - numberOfLeadingZeros(x)
  • ceil(log2(x)) = 32 - numberOfLeadingZeros(x - 1)
Parameters:
i - the value whose number of leading zeros is to be computed
Returns:
the number of zero bits preceding the highest-order ("leftmost") one-bit in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value, or 32 if the value is equal to zero.
Since:
1.5

numberOfTrailingZeros

public static int numberOfTrailingZeros(int i)

Returns the number of zero bits following the lowest-order ("rightmost") one-bit in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value. Returns 32 if the specified value has no one-bits in its two's complement representation, in other words if it is equal to zero.

Parameters:
i - the value whose number of trailing zeros is to be computed
Returns:
the number of zero bits following the lowest-order ("rightmost") one-bit in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value, or 32 if the value is equal to zero.
Since:
1.5

bitCount

public static int bitCount(int i)

Returns the number of one-bits in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value. This function is sometimes referred to as the population count.

Parameters:
i - the value whose bits are to be counted
Returns:
the number of one-bits in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value.
Since:
1.5

rotateLeft

public static int rotateLeft(int i,
                             int distance)

Returns the value obtained by rotating the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value left by the specified number of bits. (Bits shifted out of the left hand, or high-order, side reenter on the right, or low-order.)

Note that left rotation with a negative distance is equivalent to right rotation: rotateLeft(val, -distance) == rotateRight(val, distance). Note also that rotation by any multiple of 32 is a no-op, so all but the last five bits of the rotation distance can be ignored, even if the distance is negative: rotateLeft(val, distance) == rotateLeft(val, distance & 0x1F).

Parameters:
i - the value whose bits are to be rotated left
distance - the number of bit positions to rotate left
Returns:
the value obtained by rotating the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value left by the specified number of bits.
Since:
1.5

rotateRight

public static int rotateRight(int i,
                              int distance)

Returns the value obtained by rotating the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value right by the specified number of bits. (Bits shifted out of the right hand, or low-order, side reenter on the left, or high-order.)

Note that right rotation with a negative distance is equivalent to left rotation: rotateRight(val, -distance) == rotateLeft(val, distance). Note also that rotation by any multiple of 32 is a no-op, so all but the last five bits of the rotation distance can be ignored, even if the distance is negative: rotateRight(val, distance) == rotateRight(val, distance & 0x1F).

Parameters:
i - the value whose bits are to be rotated right
distance - the number of bit positions to rotate right
Returns:
the value obtained by rotating the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value right by the specified number of bits.
Since:
1.5

reverse

public static int reverse(int i)

Returns the value obtained by reversing the order of the bits in the two's complement binary representation of the specified int value.

Parameters:
i - the value to be reversed
Returns:
the value obtained by reversing order of the bits in the specified int value.
Since:
1.5

signum

public static int signum(int i)

Returns the signum function of the specified int value. (The return value is -1 if the specified value is negative; 0 if the specified value is zero; and 1 if the specified value is positive.)

Parameters:
i - the value whose signum is to be computed
Returns:
the signum function of the specified int value.
Since:
1.5

reverseBytes

public static int reverseBytes(int i)

Returns the value obtained by reversing the order of the bytes in the two's complement representation of the specified int value.

Parameters:
i - the value whose bytes are to be reversed
Returns:
the value obtained by reversing the bytes in the specified int value.
Since:
1.5

sum

public static int sum(int a,
                      int b)

Adds two integers together as per the + operator.

Parameters:
a - the first operand
b - the second operand
Returns:
the sum of a and b
Since:
1.8
See Also:
BinaryOperator

max

public static int max(int a,
                      int b)

Returns the greater of two int values as if by calling Math.max.

Parameters:
a - the first operand
b - the second operand
Returns:
the greater of a and b
Since:
1.8
See Also:
BinaryOperator

min

public static int min(int a,
                      int b)

Returns the smaller of two int values as if by calling Math.min.

Parameters:
a - the first operand
b - the second operand
Returns:
the smaller of a and b
Since:
1.8
See Also:
BinaryOperator

© 1993–2017, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
Documentation extracted from Debian's OpenJDK Development Kit package.
Licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2, with the Classpath Exception.
Various third party code in OpenJDK is licensed under different licenses (see Debian package).
Java and OpenJDK are trademarks or registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates.