Construct and Concatenate Java Objects
Create Java Object
Many Java® method signatures contain Java object arguments. To create a Java object, call one of the constructors of the class. For an example, see Call Java Method.
Java objects are not arrays like MATLAB® types. Calling MATLAB functions that expect MATLAB arrays might have unexpected results. Use Java methods to work on Java arrays instead. For an example, see Call Java Method.
Concatenate Objects of Same Class
To concatenate Java objects, use either the cat
function or the
[]
operators.
Concatenating objects of the same Java class results in an array of objects of that class.
value1 = java.lang.Integer(88); value2 = java.lang.Integer(45); cat(1,value1,value2)
ans = java.lang.Integer[]: [88] [45]
Concatenate Objects of Unlike Classes
If you concatenate objects of unlike classes, MATLAB finds one class from which all the input objects inherit. MATLAB selects the lowest common parent in the Java class hierarchy as the output class. For example, concatenating objects of
java.lang.Byte
, java.lang.Integer
, and
java.lang.Double
creates an object of the common parent to the three
input classes, java.lang.Number
.
byte = java.lang.Byte(127); integer = java.lang.Integer(52); double = java.lang.Double(7.8); [byte integer double]
ans = java.lang.Number[]: [ 127] [ 52] [7.8000]
If there is no common, lower-level parent, then the resultant class is
java.lang.Object
.
byte = java.lang.Byte(127); point = java.awt.Point(24,127); [byte point]
ans = java.lang.Object[]: [ 127] [1×1 java.awt.Point]