What is difference between in the following statements
String name = "Tiger";
final String name ="Tiger";
Although the String class is final class, why do we need to create a String "CONSTANT" variable as final?
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I think the source of the confusion here is that the
See the Wikipedia article on final in Java for examples on each case. |
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"final" means different things in the two cases. The java.lang.String class is final. This means you can't inherit from it. The variable "name" is final, meaning that you can't change it to point to a different instance of String. So a non-final String variable isn't a constant, because you could read it at two different times and get different values. As it happens, Java string objects are also immutable. This means that you cannot modify the value which a particular String object represents. Compare this with an array - you can replace the first element of an array object with a different object, but you can't replace the first character of a String object with a different char. This is why String.replace() returns a new string - it can't modify the old one. One reason that String is final is to prevent an instance of a subclass of String, which implements mutable behaviour, being passed in place of a String. But whether you can modify a particular object, and whether you can assign a different object to a variable, are completely different concepts. One is a property of String objects, and the other is a property of String variables, which are references to String objects. |
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You are confusing immutable with final. String, like Integer and Long, is an immutable class in that the internal data is protected from modification through encapsulation. However, like Ayman said, final refers to the pointer to the string. |
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Remember that Java final keyword serves two purposes in this case:
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Have a look at The final word on the final keyword.
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If a variable is marked as final then the value of that variable cannot be changed i.e final keyword when used with a variable makes it a constant. And if you try to change the value of that variable during the course of your program the compiler will give you an error. NOTE : If you mark variable of a reference type as final, that variable cannot refer to any other object. However, you can change the object's contents, because only the reference itself is final. SOURCE : Final Keyword in Java |
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