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Documentation

The Java™ Tutorials
Classes and Objects
Classes
Declaring Classes
Declaring Member Variables
Defining Methods
Providing Constructors for Your Classes
Passing Information to a Method or a Constructor
Objects
Creating Objects
Using Objects
More on Classes
Returning a Value from a Method
Using the this Keyword
Controlling Access to Members of a Class
Understanding Class Members
Initializing Fields
Summary of Creating and Using Classes and Objects
Questions and Exercises
Questions and Exercises
Nested Classes
Inner Class Example
Local Classes
Anonymous Classes
Lambda Expressions
Method References
When to Use Nested Classes, Local Classes, Anonymous Classes, and Lambda Expressions
Questions and Exercises
Enum Types
Questions and Exercises
Trail: Learning the Java Language
Lesson: Classes and Objects
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The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
SeeDev.java for updated tutorials taking advantage of the latest releases.
SeeJava Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
SeeJDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.

Enum Types

Anenum type is a special data type that enables for a variable to be a set of predefined constants. The variable must be equal to one of the values that have been predefined for it. Common examples include compass directions (values of NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, and WEST) and the days of the week.

Because they are constants, the names of an enum type's fields are in uppercase letters.

In the Java programming language, you define an enum type by using theenum keyword. For example, you would specify a days-of-the-week enum type as:

public enum Day {    SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY,    THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY }

You should use enum types any time you need to represent a fixed set of constants. That includes natural enum types such as the planets in our solar system and data sets where you know all possible values at compile time—for example, the choices on a menu, command line flags, and so on.

Here is some code that shows you how to use theDay enum defined above:

public class EnumTest {    Day day;        public EnumTest(Day day) {        this.day = day;    }        public void tellItLikeItIs() {        switch (day) {            case MONDAY:                System.out.println("Mondays are bad.");                break;                                case FRIDAY:                System.out.println("Fridays are better.");                break;                                     case SATURDAY: case SUNDAY:                System.out.println("Weekends are best.");                break;                                    default:                System.out.println("Midweek days are so-so.");                break;        }    }        public static void main(String[] args) {        EnumTest firstDay = new EnumTest(Day.MONDAY);        firstDay.tellItLikeItIs();        EnumTest thirdDay = new EnumTest(Day.WEDNESDAY);        thirdDay.tellItLikeItIs();        EnumTest fifthDay = new EnumTest(Day.FRIDAY);        fifthDay.tellItLikeItIs();        EnumTest sixthDay = new EnumTest(Day.SATURDAY);        sixthDay.tellItLikeItIs();        EnumTest seventhDay = new EnumTest(Day.SUNDAY);        seventhDay.tellItLikeItIs();    }}

The output is:

Mondays are bad.Midweek days are so-so.Fridays are better.Weekends are best.Weekends are best.

Java programming language enum types are much more powerful than their counterparts in other languages. Theenum declaration defines aclass (called anenum type). The enum class body can include methods and other fields. The compiler automatically adds some special methods when it creates an enum. For example, they have a staticvalues method that returns an array containing all of the values of the enum in the order they are declared. This method is commonly used in combination with the for-each construct to iterate over the values of an enum type. For example, this code from thePlanet class example below iterates over all the planets in the solar system.

for (Planet p : Planet.values()) {    System.out.printf("Your weight on %s is %f%n",                      p, p.surfaceWeight(mass));}

Note: All enums implicitly extendjava.lang.Enum. Because a class can only extend one parent (seeDeclaring Classes), the Java language does not support multiple inheritance of state (seeMultiple Inheritance of State, Implementation, and Type), and therefore an enum cannot extend anything else.

In the following example,Planet is an enum type that represents the planets in the solar system. They are defined with constant mass and radius properties.

Each enum constant is declared with values for the mass and radius parameters. These values are passed to the constructor when the constant is created. Java requires that the constants be defined first, prior to any fields or methods. Also, when there are fields and methods, the list of enum constants must end with a semicolon.


Note: The constructor for an enum type must be package-private or private access. It automatically creates the constants that are defined at the beginning of the enum body. You cannot invoke an enum constructor yourself.

In addition to its properties and constructor,Planet has methods that allow you to retrieve the surface gravity and weight of an object on each planet. Here is a sample program that takes your weight on earth (in any unit) and calculates and prints your weight on all of the planets (in the same unit):

public enum Planet {    MERCURY (3.303e+23, 2.4397e6),    VENUS   (4.869e+24, 6.0518e6),    EARTH   (5.976e+24, 6.37814e6),    MARS    (6.421e+23, 3.3972e6),    JUPITER (1.9e+27,   7.1492e7),    SATURN  (5.688e+26, 6.0268e7),    URANUS  (8.686e+25, 2.5559e7),    NEPTUNE (1.024e+26, 2.4746e7);    private final double mass;   // in kilograms    private final double radius; // in meters    Planet(double mass, double radius) {        this.mass = mass;        this.radius = radius;    }    private double mass() { return mass; }    private double radius() { return radius; }    // universal gravitational constant  (m3 kg-1 s-2)    public static final double G = 6.67300E-11;    double surfaceGravity() {        return G * mass / (radius * radius);    }    double surfaceWeight(double otherMass) {        return otherMass * surfaceGravity();    }    public static void main(String[] args) {        if (args.length != 1) {            System.err.println("Usage: java Planet <earth_weight>");            System.exit(-1);        }        double earthWeight = Double.parseDouble(args[0]);        double mass = earthWeight/EARTH.surfaceGravity();        for (Planet p : Planet.values())           System.out.printf("Your weight on %s is %f%n",                             p, p.surfaceWeight(mass));    }}

If you runPlanet.class from the command line with an argument of 175, you get this output:

$ java Planet 175Your weight on MERCURY is 66.107583Your weight on VENUS is 158.374842Your weight on EARTH is 175.000000Your weight on MARS is 66.279007Your weight on JUPITER is 442.847567Your weight on SATURN is 186.552719Your weight on URANUS is 158.397260Your weight on NEPTUNE is 199.207413
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