2

Say, I have some class which holds an array of integers in it.

Integer[] numbers;

Also, I have some simple constructor which initializes my array:

public Program()
{
    numbers = new Integer[11];
    numbers[0] = null;
}

As you can see, I have an array of 11 elements.

The point is that I will never ever change the first one with index 0.

Is there a way to finalize the first element of my array, so it can't be changed?

Like with final variables.

3
  • Well, Integers are immutable, if that's what you're asking... Feb 14, 2013 at 21:19
  • Oh, sorry, there was a typo in my question. I've corrected it. Feb 14, 2013 at 21:21
  • Nope. Take out the first element and put in a new final variable. Feb 14, 2013 at 21:21

6 Answers 6

4

No, you cannot do that with an array. In fact, inability to make array elements read-only is a major drawback of using arrays in situations when data could be modified externally.

The only approach to protect elements of your array is to encapsulate the array in a class that would check elements and indexes before performing modifications:

public class ArrayWithFixedFirst {
    private final Integer[] numbers = new Integer[11];
    public Integer get(int index) {
        return numbers[index];
    }
    public void set(int index, Integer value) {
        if (index == 0) throw new IllegalArgumentException();
        numbers[index] = value;
    }
}
2

I don't believe there is a way to specify that the first element of an array cannot be re-assigned.

I think your best bet would be to create a wrapper class for the array, and then ignore any attempts to re-assign the first element.

1

Through encapsulation, you can allow/disallow the array modification.

public void updateArray(int position,int value){

if(position > 0 && position < numbers.length){

    numbers[position] = value;

    }
}
0

You can not force an array to be unmodifiable. An alternative is using Collections.unmodifiableList. But the whole list will therefore be unmodifiable.

0

Intriguing question, but I'm going to have to say no. Java arrays will not allow you to finalize just one element. You could possibly get the same functionality by writing a custom wrapper, but that begs the question, why? I don't know what application you're going for, but I would recommend wrapping a ten element array and decrementing your index by one, and returning null for the zero'th index

0

I don't know why you'd do it, but something like this:

class NoFirstArray extends ArrayList {
    public NoFirstArray(int size,Object initialValue) {
       super(size);
       super.set(0,initialValue);
    }
    public void set(Integer i, Object value) {
        if(i == 0) throw RuntimeException();
        super.set(i,value);
    }
    public void remove(int i) {
        if(i == 0) throw RuntimeException();
        super.remove(i);
    }
}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.