Java performance: true vs. Boolean.TRUE
Firstly, the performance advantage of using any one over the others is most likely to be too small to be relevant. Code simplicity / readability / maintainability is a far more important ... in the vast majority of cases.
None of the examples involve creating Boolean
instances.
It is theoretically possible that 3 of the 4 could trigger the initialization of the Boolean
class AND that your application wouldn't otherwise have done that. In that highly unlikely event, your entire application will allocate 2 objects that wouldn't otherwise have been allocated. The initialization will probably take a few microseconds, and consume a few bytes of RAM (less than 50) in the long term.
This one will be equal to or faster than all of the others because it simply entails setting a register to zero.
boolean isItTrue(arg){
return true;
}
Taken in isolation, this has to load a static reference from memory, rather than zero a register. However, the JIT compiler may be able to optimize this away in some circumstances.
Boolean isItTrue(arg){
return Boolean.TRUE;
}
On the face of it, this involve a call to Boolean.valueOf(true)
to "box" the true
, but the JIT compiler should be able to optimize it to the same code as the previous one by inlining the call.
Boolean isItTrue(arg){
return true;
}
On the face of it, this involves a call to Boolean.booleanValue(Boolean.TRUE)
to "unbox" the Boolean
. This call can be inlined. It is also possible that the JIT compiler can avoid loading the reference to the Boolean
object and fetching its value field.
boolean isItTrue(arg){
return Boolean.TRUE
}
Bottom line is that it the relative performance of the 4 alternatives depends on how successful the JIT compiler will be in optimizing. That will depend on the context, the specific of the JIT compiler, the JVM settings, and so on. In the best case, the JIT compiler could (at least in theory) produce the same (optimal) code for all of them.
If there is any performance gain it is so minuscule as to be irrelevant. Boolean.TRUE and Boolean.FALSE don't return a new object in any case.