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String and Final
Strings are constant; their values cannot be changed after they are created. Does this mean that a final String does not really make sense in Java, in the sense that the final attribute is somehow redundant?
4 Answers
The String object is immutable but what it is is actually a reference to a String object which could be changed.
For example:
String someString = "Lala"; You can reassign the value held by this variable (to make it reference a different string):
someString = "asdf"; However, with this:
final String someString = "Lala"; Then the above reassignment would not be possible and would result in a compile-time error.
final refers to the variable, not the object, so yes, it make sense.
e.g.
final String s = "s"; s = "a"; // illegal It makes sense. The final keyword prevents future assignments to the variable. The following would be an error in java:
final String x = "foo"; x = "bar" // error on this assignment References are final, Objects are not. You can define a mutable object as final and change state of it. What final ensures is that the reference you are using cannot ever point to another object again.
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