No.
The non-empty cells of an ArrayList must contain object references (or null).
To put an int into an ArrayList,
put the int inside of an Integer object.
Now the object can be put into an ArrayList.
The following program builds a list of integers and then writes them out.
import java.util.* ;
public class WrapperExample
{
public static void main ( String[] args)
{
ArrayList<Integer> data = new ArrayList<Integer>();
data.add( new Integer(1) );
data.add( new Integer(3) );
data.add( new Integer(17) );
data.add( new Integer(29) );
for ( Integer val : data )
System.out.print( val + " " );
System.out.println( );
}
}
The program writes out:
1 3 17 29
The picture emphasizes that the ArrayList contains an array of object
references, as always.
It shows the ints each contained in a little box that
represents the wrapper object.
Would this statement work in the program?
data.add( 44 );