Because the client could then set your internal members to something else entirely. It seems like you might be confusing a String
's being immutable with the reference being final
.
Imagine you have this class:
public class MyClass {
public String first = "Test";
public String second = "Test";
}
So as Java compiler experts, we know internally first
and second
refer to the same object. Cool.
Now when I use MyClass
:
MyClass myClass = new MyClass();
myClass.second = "Time to do some hackin'";
That's bad. Like real bad.
Declaring String
members private
has nothing to do with losing the advantage of compiler efficiencies. It is about the class encapsulating its implementation so that its clients aren't tightly coupled to it and so the class doesn't have to worry about weird behavior caused by something irresponsible the client did.
The fact that the object "Test" is immutable doesn't mean I can't change first
or second
to point to something else.
Hope that helps.