Question
Which practice avoids a common mistake with Primitive Types and Wrappers?
- Ignore the Primitive Types and Wrappers issue and rely on team discipline instead of APIs or contracts.
- Silence the Primitive Types and Wrappers problem by using raw types, broad catches, or shared mutable state.
- Prefer the version of Primitive Types and Wrappers that makes behavior less predictable as long as the code compiles.
- Avoid comparing wrapper objects with == when you actually mean value equality.
Hint
Look for the option that protects correctness instead of hiding the problem.
Answer and rationale
Correct answer: D. Avoid comparing wrapper objects with == when you actually mean value equality.
Avoid comparing wrapper objects with == when you actually mean value equality. This is a common failure mode in real Java code and a frequent interview follow-up.
Track: Java