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Home/ Questions/Q 905481
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T16:13:33+00:00 2026-05-15T16:13:33+00:00

I have a method with the signature public void setFoo(int newFoo) in a model

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I have a method with the signature public void setFoo(int newFoo) in a model I’m writing. I’m using the following code to call it from within my controller:

protected void setModelProperty(String propertyName, Object newValue) {

    for (AbstractModel model: registeredModels) {
        try {
            Method method = model.getClass().
                getMethod("set"+propertyName, new Class[] {
                                                  newValue.getClass()
                                              }
                         );
            method.invoke(model, newValue);

        } catch (Exception ex) {
            //  Handle exception.
            System.err.println(ex.toString());
        }
    }
}

Calling this method like controller.setModelProperty("Foo",5); results in an exception being thrown: java.lang.NoSuchMethodException: foo.bar.models.FooModel.setFoo(java.lang.Integer) — it looks like the int is being boxed as an Integer, which doesn’t match the signature of setFoo.

Is there any way to convince this reflection code to pass 5 (or whatever int I pass in) as an Integer, without the boxing? Or do I have to create public void setFoo(Integer newFoo) in my model and unbox explicitly, then call the original setFoo?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T16:13:34+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 4:13 pm

    You could specialise your setModelProperty for any primitives you expect to be used with:

    protected void setModelProperty(String propertyName, int newValue) { /* ... */ }
    

    Alternatively, you could use instanceof on newValue to check for boxed primitives:

    Class[] classes;
    if (newValue instanceof Integer) {
      classes = new Class[] { int.class };
    } else if (newValue instanceof Double) {
      /* etc...*/
    } else {
      classes = new Class[] {newValue.getClass() };
    }
    

    Or finally, if you have the source for setFoo, you could change it to take a boxed Integer instead of an int – the overhead is usually negligible.

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