There
are two data types available in Java −
·
Primitive Data Types
·
Reference/Object Data Types
Primitive Data Types
There
are eight primitive datatypes supported by Java. Primitive datatypes are
predefined by the language and named by a keyword. Let us now look into the
eight primitive data types in detail.
byte
· Byte
data type is an 8-bit signed two's complement integer
· Minimum
value is -128
· Maximum
value is 127
· Default
value is 0
· Byte
data type is used to save space in large arrays, mainly in place of integers,
since a byte is four times smaller than an integer.
· Example:
byte a = 100, byte b = -50
Short
· Short
data type is a 16-bit signed two's complement integer
· Minimum
value is -32,768
· Maximum
value is 32,767 (inclusive)
· Short
data type can also be used to save memory as byte data type. A short is 2 times
smaller than an integer
· Default
value is 0.
· Example:
short s = 10000, short r = -20000
int
· Int
data type is a 32-bit signed two's complement integer.
· Minimum
value is - 2,147,483,648
· Maximum
value is 2,147,483,647(inclusive)
· Integer
is generally used as the default data type for integral values unless there is
a concern about memory.
· The
default value is 0
· Example:
int a = 100000, int b = -200000
long
·
Long data type is a 64-bit signed two's complement integer
·
Minimum value is -9,223,372,036,854,775,808
·
Maximum value is 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (inclusive)
·
This type is used when a wider range than int is needed
·
Default value is 0L
·
Example: long a = 100000L, long b = -200000L
float
· Float
data type is a single-precision 32-bit floating point
· Float
is mainly used to save memory in large arrays of floating point numbers
· Default
value is 0.0f
· Float
data type is never used for precise values such as currency
· Example:
float f1 = 234.5f
double
· double
data type is a double-precision 64-bit floating point
· This
data type is generally used as the default data type for decimal values,
generally the default choice
· Double
data type should never be used for precise values such as currency
· Default
value is 0.0d
· Example:
double d1 = 123.4
boolean
·
boolean data type represents one bit of information
·
There are only two possible values: true and false
·
This data type is used for simple flags that track true/false
conditions
·
Default value is false
·
Example: boolean one = true
char
·
char data type is a single 16-bit Unicode character
·
Minimum value is '\u0000' (or 0)
·
Maximum value is '\uffff' (or 65,535 inclusive)
·
Char data type is used to store any character
·
Example: char letterA = 'A'
Reference Datatypes
· Reference
variables are created using defined constructors of the classes. They are used
to access objects. These variables are declared to be of a specific type that
cannot be changed. For example, Employee, Puppy, etc.
· Class
objects and various type of array variables come under reference datatype.
· Default
value of any reference variable is null.
· A
reference variable can be used to refer any object of the declared type or any
compatible type.
· Example:
Animal animal = new Animal("giraffe");
Java Literals
A
literal is a source code representation of a fixed value. They are represented
directly in the code without any computation.
Literals
can be assigned to any primitive type variable. For example −
byte a = 68;
char a = 'A'
byte,
int, long, and short can be expressed in decimal(base 10), hexadecimal(base 16)
or octal(base 8) number systems as well.
Prefix
0 is used to indicate octal, and prefix 0x indicates hexadecimal when using
these number systems for literals. For example
String
literals in Java are specified like they are in most other languages by
enclosing a sequence of characters between a pair of double quotes.
Java
language supports few special escape sequences for String and char literals as
well. They are −
Notation
|
Character represented
|
\n
|
Newline
|
\r
|
Carriage return
|
\f
|
Formfeed
|
\b
|
Backspace
|
\s
|
Space
|
\t
|
tab
|
\"
|
Double quote
|
\'
|
Single quote
|
\\
|
backslash
|
\ddd
|
Octal character
|
\uxxxx
|
Hexadecimal UNICODE
character
|
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