28 September 2010

Default Values of Premitive type

Default Values

It's not always necessary to assign a value when a field is declared. Fields that are declared but not initialized will be set to a reasonable default by the compiler. Generally speaking, this default will be zero or null, depending on the data type. Relying on such default values, however, is generally considered bad programming style.
The following chart summarizes the default values for the above data types.



Data Type
Default Value (for fields)
byte
0
short
0
int
0
long
0L
float
0.0f
double
0.0d
char
'\u0000'
String (or any object)
null
boolean
false


Local variables are slightly different; the compiler never assigns a default value to an uninitialized local variable. If you cannot initialize your local variable where it is declared, make sure to assign it a value before you attempt to use it. Accessing an uninitialized local variable will result in a compile-time error.

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