I think the following example from the JEP 360 is showing it:
package com.example.geometry;
public abstract sealed class Shape
permits Circle, Rectangle, Square {...}
public final class Circle extends Shape {...}
public sealed class Rectangle extends Shape
permits TransparentRectangle, FilledRectangle {...}
public final class TransparentRectangle extends Rectangle {...}
public final class FilledRectangle extends Rectangle {...}
public non-sealed class Square extends Shape {...}
You want to permit only the specified classes to extend Shape
. Now what's the point in making Square
non-sealed
? Because you want to allow any other class to extend Square
(and the hierarchy).
Think of it like that: Any class that wants to extend Shape
will have to do that with either Circle
, Rectangle
or Square
in between. So every extending class of this sub-hierarchy will be either a Circle
, Rectangle
or a Square
(is-a relationship).
The sealed
/non-sealed
-combination allows you to "seal" only parts of your hierarchy, not all of it (starting from a root).
Notice what the JEP 360 tells us about the permitted classes:
Every permitted subclass must choose a modifier to describe how it continues the sealing initiated by its superclass:
The options are: final
, sealed
or non-sealed
. You are forced to be explicit, so we need non-sealed
to "break the seal".
Brian Goetz has posted a realistic use case and explained what the real life benefits are. I want to add another example:
Imagine you are developing a game with heroes and monsters. Some classes could be like that:
public sealed class Character permits Hero, Monster {}
public sealed class Hero extends Character permits Jack, Luci {}
public non-sealed class Monster extends Character {}
public final class Jack extends Hero {}
public final class Luci extends Hero {}
The game has two main characters and there are several enemies. The main characters are set in stone but there can be as many different monsters as you like. Every character in the game is either a hero or a monster.
This is a minimal example, which is hopefully a little more illustrative, and there might be changes, e.g. the addition of a class CustomHero
that enables modders to create custom heroes.