295

In Java, you can define multiple top level classes in a single file, providing that at most one of these is public (see JLS §7.6). See below for example.

  1. Is there a tidy name for this technique (analogous to inner, nested, anonymous)?

  2. The JLS says the system may enforce the restriction that these secondary classes can't be 'referred to by code in other compilation units of the package', e.g., they can't be treated as package-private. Is that really something that changes between Java implementations?

e.g. PublicClass.java:

package com.example.multiple;

public class PublicClass {
    PrivateImpl impl = new PrivateImpl();
}

class PrivateImpl {
    int implementationData;
}
2
  • 16
    +1 Good questions. I've never really given the matter much thought, since it's almost never necessary to do this.
    – Michael Myers
    Feb 25, 2010 at 18:47
  • 16
    note that this is a vestigial feature; it would never have been possible if java had had nested classes from the beginning. Feb 25, 2010 at 23:10

9 Answers 9

159

Javac doesn't actively prohibit this, but it does have a limitation that pretty much means that you'd never want to refer to a top-level class from another file unless it has the same name as the file it's in.

Suppose you have two files, Foo.java and Bar.java.

Foo.java contains:

  • public class Foo

Bar.java contains:

  • public class Bar
  • class Baz

Let's also say that all of the classes are in the same package (and the files are in the same directory).

What happens if Foo refers to Baz but not Bar and we try to compile Foo.java? The compilation fails with an error like this:

Foo.java:2: cannot find symbol
symbol  : class Baz
location: class Foo
  private Baz baz;
          ^
1 error

This makes sense if you think about it. If Foo refers to Baz, but there is no Baz.java (or Baz.class), how can javac know what source file to look in?

If you instead tell javac to compile Foo.java and Bar.java at the same time, or if you had previously compiled Bar.java (leaving the Baz.class where javac can find it), or even if Foo happens to refer to Bar in addition to Baz, then this error goes away. This makes your build process feel very unreliable and flaky, however.

Because the actual limitation, which is more like "don't refer to a top-level class from another file unless it either has the same name as the file it's in or you're also referring to another class that's named the same thing as that file that's also in that file" is kind of hard to follow, people usually go with the much more straightforward (though stricter) convention of just putting one top-level class in each file. This is also better if you ever change your mind about whether a class should be public or not.

Newer versions of javac can also produce a warning in this situation with -Xlint:all:

auxiliary class Baz in ./Bar.java should not be accessed from outside its own source file

Sometimes there really is a good reason why everybody does something in a particular way.

7
  • Does Maven do anything to make compilation reliable? Jan 18, 2019 at 10:28
  • @Laurence You said If Foo.java refers to Baz, but there is no Baz.java (or Baz.class), how can javac know what source file to look in? but even if I create a Baz.java, also then compiling Foo.java fails. It still does not know what source file to look in. Sep 29, 2021 at 8:44
  • 1
    @KushalKumar javac will search the sourcepath, which defaults to the user classpath (which in turn defaults to the current directory). If your source is not rooted from a directory in your classpath, you'll need to specify your sourcepath. Oct 1, 2021 at 18:28
  • @LaurenceGonsalves Thanks. After reading a few times, I can understand it well. Except for when you say what the actual limitation is, "don't refer to a top-level class from another file unless it has the same name as the file it's in or you're also referring to a class that's in that same file that's named the same thing as the file" Could you please also explain this line? Oct 4, 2021 at 18:18
  • 1
    @KushalKumar javac starts with the set of source files you specifically ask it to compile. When you refer to a class not in those sources it checks the classpath for compiled classes, and the source path for source files with a matching name. If it finds the latter, it adds it to the set of source files it's working on. So if you refer to Baz, and it's in the same file as Bar, javac will find Baz only because it pulled in Bar.java due to the reference to Bar. Oct 4, 2021 at 20:25
130

My suggested name for this technique (including multiple top-level classes in a single source file) would be "mess". Seriously, I don't think it's a good idea - I'd use a nested type in this situation instead. Then it's still easy to predict which source file it's in. I don't believe there's an official term for this approach though.

As for whether this actually changes between implementations - I highly doubt it, but if you avoid doing it in the first place, you'll never need to care :)

13
  • 88
    I'm not the downvoter, but the fact this answer is something that could be called "normative" (ie. "you should" instead of "in fact ... however ...") is the most likely reason for it to get a downvote I think. It doesn't actually answer any of the questions. Like raising an irrelevant exception instead of returning anything / raising an exception that has information about actual facts instead of opinions.
    – n611x007
    Jul 6, 2012 at 6:19
  • 6
    I found what I think is a minor exception to @JonSkeet 's suggestion to use a nested type (which I would otherwise agree with): if the main class is generic and the type parameter is the second class, the second class can't be nested. And if the two classes are tightly coupled (like PublicClass and PrivateImpl in the question), I think it's a good idea to put PrivateImpl as a top-level class in the same file.
    – jfritz42
    Nov 16, 2012 at 18:13
  • 6
    @BoomerRogers: No, this is definitely not the "core basis of component based programming". If you're programming against a component, why would you care how the source code is organized? (Personally I prefer dependency injection rather than the service locator pattern, but that's a different matter.) Separate API and source code organization in your mind - they're very different things.
    – Jon Skeet
    May 22, 2014 at 10:50
  • 3
    @JonSkeet Let me rephrase: Your "answer" is a personal irrelevant opinion. (i.e. answers like "mess" and "i doubt it" have little value.) So, your post does not answer any of the 2 posed questions. Check the answer of polygenelubricants, and you will see that he manages to answer both.
    – bvdb
    Apr 6, 2015 at 15:08
  • 1
    @bvdb: (And there are lots of things which are bad practice but allowed by the spec. I would urge people not to write public int[] foo(int x)[] { return new int[5][5]; } as well, even though that's valid.)
    – Jon Skeet
    Apr 6, 2015 at 15:50
25

I believe you simply call PrivateImpl what it is: a non-public top-level class. You can also declare non-public top-level interfaces as well.

e.g., elsewhere on SO: Non-public top-level class vs static nested class

As for changes in behavior between versions, there was this discussion about something that "worked perfectly" in 1.2.2. but stopped working in 1.4 in sun's forum: Java Compiler - unable to declare a non public top level classes in a file.

3
  • 1
    My only issue with this is that you can have a non-public top level class be the only class in a file, so it doesn't address the multiplicity. Feb 25, 2010 at 19:47
  • I understand the concern, but as you can see this is a terminology that others have historically used. If I have to make up my own term, I'll probably call it secondary top level types. Feb 25, 2010 at 20:48
  • this is really a link-only answer, and now that link to sun forum doesn't work, there isn't much left
    – eis
    Feb 16, 2021 at 14:23
19

You can have as many classes as you wish like this

public class Fun {
    Fun() {
        System.out.println("Fun constructor");
    }
    void fun() {
        System.out.println("Fun mathod");
    }
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Fun fu = new Fun();
        fu.fun();
        Fen fe = new Fen();
        fe.fen();
        Fin fi = new Fin();
        fi.fin();
        Fon fo = new Fon();
        fo.fon();
        Fan fa = new Fan();
        fa.fan();
        fa.run();
    }
}

class Fen {
    Fen() {
        System.out.println("fen construuctor");

    }
    void fen() {
        System.out.println("Fen method");
    }
}

class Fin {
    void fin() {
        System.out.println("Fin method");
    }
}

class Fon {
    void fon() {
        System.out.println("Fon method");
    } 
}

class Fan {
    void fan() {
        System.out.println("Fan method");
    }
    public void run() {
        System.out.println("run");
    }
}
2
  • 1
    @Nenotlep When you do an "improve formatting", then please also take care that it doesn't messes with the code itself, like removing backslashes.
    – Tom
    Mar 3, 2016 at 13:12
  • 6
    That doesn’t answer the question. Dec 1, 2017 at 13:01
10

Just FYI, if you are using Java 11+, there is an exception to this rule: if you run your java file directly (without compilation). In this mode, there is no restriction on a single public class per file. However, the class with the main method must be the first one in the file.

4

1.Is there a tidy name for this technique (analogous to inner, nested, anonymous)?

Multi-class single-file demo.

2.The JLS says the system may enforce the restriction that these secondary classes can't be referred to by code in other compilation units of the package, e.g., they can't be treated as package-private. Is that really something that changes between Java implementations?

I'm not aware of any which don't have that restriction - all the file based compilers won't allow you to refer to source code classes in files which are not named the same as the class name. ( if you compile a multi-class file, and put the classes on the class path, then any compiler will find them )

1

Yes you can, with public static members on an outer public class, like so:

public class Foo {

    public static class FooChild extends Z {
        String foo;
    }

    public static class ZeeChild extends Z {

    }

}

and another file that references the above:

public class Bar {

    public static void main(String[] args){

        Foo.FooChild f = new Foo.FooChild();
        System.out.println(f);

    }
}

put them in the same folder. Compile with:

javac folder/*.java

and run with:

 java -cp folder Bar
1
  • 3
    That example does not answer the question. You are giving an example of nested static classes, which is not the same as having two top level classes defined in the same file. Nov 27, 2019 at 23:29
0

According to Effective Java 2nd edition (Item 13):

"If a package-private top-level class (or interface) is used by only one class, consider making the top-level class a private nested class of the sole class that uses it (Item 22). This reduces its accessibility from all the classes in its package to the one class that uses it. But it is far more important to reduce the accessibility of a gratuitously public class than a package-private top-level class: ... "

The nested class may be static or non-static based on whether the member class needs access to the enclosing instance (Item 22).

1
  • 1
    The OP Is not asking about nested classes. Apr 1, 2018 at 22:08
-16

No. You can't. But it is very possible in Scala:

class Foo {val bar = "a"}
class Bar {val foo = "b"}

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