Why use any programming language feature? The reason we have languages at all is for
- Programmers to efficiently and correctly express algorithms in a form computers can use.
- Maintainers to understand algorithms others have written and correctly make changes.
Enums improve both liklihood of correctness and readability without writing a lot of boilerplate. If you are willing to write boilerplate, then you can "simulate" enums:
public class Color {
private Color() {} // Prevent others from making colors.
public static final Color RED = new Color();
public static final Color AMBER = new Color();
public static final Color GREEN = new Color();
}
Now you can write:
Color trafficLightColor = Color.RED;
The boilerplate above has much the same effect as
public enum Color { RED, AMBER, GREEN };
Both provide the same level of checking help from the compiler. Boilerplate is just more typing. But saving a lot of typing, makes the programmer more efficient (see 1), so it's a worthwhile feature.
It's worthwhile for at least one more reason, too:
Switch statements
One thing that the static final enum simulation above does not give you is nice switch cases. For enum types, the Java switch uses the type of its variable to infer the scope of enum cases, so for the enum Color above you merely need to say:
Color color = ... ;
switch (color) {
case RED:
...
break;
}
Note it's not Color.RED in the case. If you don't use enum, the only way to use named quantities work with switch is something like:
public Class Color {
public statc final int RED = 0;
public statc final int GREEN = 0;
public statc final int BLUE = 0;
}
But now a variable to hold a color must have type int. The nice compiler checking of the enum and the static final simulation is gone. Not happy.
Using an enum as a singleton
From the boilerplate above you can see why an enum provides a way to implement a singleton. Instead of writing:
public class SingletonClass {
public static final void INSTANCE = new SingletonClass();
private SingletonClass() {}
// all the methods and instance data for the class here
}
and then accessing it with
SingletonClass.INSTANCE
we can just say
public enum SingletonClass {
INSTANCE;
// all the methods and instance data for the class here
}
which gives us the same thing. We can get away with this because Java enums are implemented as full classes with only a little syntactic sugar sprinkled over the top. This is again less boilerplate, but it's non-obvious unless the idiom is familiar to you. I also dislike the fact that you get the various enum functions even though they don't make much sense for the singleton: ord and values, etc. (There's actually a trickier simulation where Color extends Integer that will work with switch, but it's so tricky that it even more clearly shows why enum is a better idea.)
Thread safety
Thread safety is a potential problem only when singletons are created lazily with no locking.
public class SingletonClass {
private static void INSTANCE;
private SingletonClass() {}
public SingletonClass getInstance() {
if (INSTANCE == null) INSTANCE = new SingletonClass();
return INSTANCE;
}
// all the methods and instance data for the class here
}
If many threads call getInstance simultaneously while INSTANCE is still null, any number of instances can be created. This is bad. The only solution is to add synchronized access to protect the variable INSTANCE.
However, the static final code above does not have this problem. It creates the instance eagerly at class load time. Class loading is synchronized. So there is no problem.
The enum singleton does not provide lazy creation either.
So the claim that enums are more thread safe than a manually created singleton is not exactly right. What can really be said is this: Singletons created at class load time (whether by enum or static final initialization) are thread safe. Lazily created ones are not unless explicitly synchronized.