I have recently read about the const
keyword, and I'm so confused! I can't find any difference between const
and the val
keyword, I mean we can use both of them to make an immutable variable, is there anything else that I'm missing?
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1kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/…– MichaelJun 2, 2016 at 15:34
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You can read this article android4dev.com/difference-between-var-val-and-const-in-kotlin or Watch this video youtube.com/watch?v=DQLrEGqSSI8&t=6s– Lokesh DesaiJun 5, 2020 at 15:59
8 Answers
const
s are compile time constants. Meaning that their value has to be assigned during compile time, unlike val
s, where it can be done at runtime.
This means, that const
s can never be assigned to a function or any class constructor, but only to a String
or primitive.
For example:
const val foo = complexFunctionCall() //Not okay
val fooVal = complexFunctionCall() //Okay
const val bar = "Hello world" //Also okay
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3What about something like this:
const val foo = "Hello world"
andval bar = "Hello world"
? Are they the same? Jun 2, 2016 at 15:32 -
5@MathewHany, at least not in terms of bytecode, see: stackoverflow.com/questions/37482378/static-data-in-kotlin/…– hotkeyJun 2, 2016 at 15:34
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5I think
const
values will just be completely inlined during compilation. Jun 2, 2016 at 15:35 -
154This begs another question: Why does Kotlin require
const val
instead of justconst
? It seems to me theval
keyword is totally superfluous in this context, sinceconst var
would be absurd on its face. Jun 8, 2017 at 15:51 -
37@EricLloyd With
const val
,const
is a modifier onval
rather than a keyword. Modifiers > keywords. More examples of this same design are,annotation/enum/data class
,private val
,inline fun
, etc.– AroApr 2, 2018 at 19:36
Just to add to Luka's answer:
Compile-Time Constants
Properties the value of which is known at compile time can be marked as compile time constants using the const modifier. Such properties need to fulfill the following requirements:
- Top-level or member of an object declaration or a companion object.
- Initialized with a value of type String or a primitive type
- No custom getter
Such properties can be used in annotations.
Source: Official documentation
You can transform the Kotlin to Java. Then you can see const has one more static modifier than val. The simple code like this.
Kotlin:
const val str = "hello"
class SimplePerson(val name: String, var age: Int)
To Java(Portion):
@NotNull
public static final String str = "hello";
public final class SimplePerson {
@NotNull
private final String name;
private int age;
@NotNull
public final String getName() {
return this.name;
}
public final int getAge() {
return this.age;
}
public final void setAge(int var1) {
this.age = var1;
}
public SimplePerson(@NotNull String name, int age) {
Intrinsics.checkParameterIsNotNull(name, "name");
super();
this.name = name;
this.age = age;
}
}
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3Could someone state in a comment why this answer was downvoted to oblivion? Nov 4, 2018 at 19:39
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3@JamesJordanTaylor I upvoted. But I assume it's because some people didn't read it carefully, and at a quick glance this answer seems to be talking about how to convert from java to kotlin, which would be off-topic. Nov 7, 2018 at 23:19
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2
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3@DYS: I think it will remove the "static" and it will be just public final String str = "hello"; Mar 3, 2020 at 15:25
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@DYS compare it to
SimplePerson
'sprivate final String name;
which doesn't have the const and then is private as well, but that's because it's a member val instead of a top-level/package val and not because of theconst
.– nobledJul 18, 2021 at 6:18
const kotlin to Java
const val Car_1 = "BUGATTI" // final static String Car_1 = "BUGATTI";
val kotlin to Java
val Car_1 = "BUGATTI" // final String Car_1 = "BUGATTI";
In simple Language
- The value of the const variable is known at compile time.
- The value of val is used to define constants at run time.
Example 1-
const val Car_1 = "BUGATTI" ✔
val Car_2 = getCar() ✔
const val Car_3 = getCar() ❌
//Because the function will not get executed at the compile time so it will through error
fun getCar(): String {
return "BUGATTI"
}
This is because getCar() is evaluated at run time and assigns the value to Car.
Additionally -
- val is read-only means immutable that is known at run-time
- var is mutable that is known at run-time
- const are immutable and variables that are known at compile-time
Both val
and const
are immutable.
const
is used to declare compile-time constants, whereas val
for run-time constants.
const val VENDOR_NAME = "Kifayat Pashteen" // Assignment done at compile-time
val PICon = getIP() // Assignment done at run-time
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2@whatwhatwhat yes. The code is compiled before being sent for execution. The point of time when the code executes is what is essentially known as run-time execution. Mar 1, 2021 at 15:43
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1
-
val
Kotlin val
keyword is for read-only properties in comparison with Kotlin var
keyword. The other name for read-only
property is immutable
.
Kotlin code:
val variation: Long = 100L
Java equivalent looks like this:
final Long variation = 100L;
const val
We use const
keyword for immutable properties too. const
is used for properties that are known at compile-time. That's the difference. Take into consideration that const
property must be declared globally
.
Kotlin code (in playground):
const val WEBSITE_NAME: String = "Google"
fun main() {
println(WEBSITE_NAME)
}
Java code (in playground):
class Playground {
final static String WEBSITE_NAME = "Google";
public static void main(String[ ] args) {
System.out.println(WEBSITE_NAME);
}
}
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Read-only is not the same thing as immutable so the second sentence of this answer is false. You can have a read-only
val
that produces different results on multiple calls through a custom getter or because it’s a delegated property, or because it’s open and has a setter in a subclass Feb 28 at 19:42 -
"Kotlin val keyword is for read-only properties" if so then why do you write to it in your example? Apr 26 at 13:16
For those who are looking which is more appropriate or efficient between val
and const
:
If we are going to create String or any primitive data type then we must use const val
instead of val
. Because val
will be known at runtime, so when your app is running then it will process all the values. On other hand const val
will do this earlier at compile time. So performance wise const val
will give better result.
Because I read a lot, that "val" means immutable: This is definitely not the case, just see this example:
class Test {
var x: Int = 2
val y
get() = x
}
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val test = Test()
println("test.y = ${test.y}") // prints 2
test.x = 4
println("test.y = ${test.y}") // prints 4
}
Sadly, true immutability you can currently only expect with const - but this only at compile time. At runtime you can't create true immutability.
val just means "readonly", you can't change this variable directly, only indirect like I have shown in the example above.