This article provides an overview of how to create an immutable class in Java programming.
An object is immutable when its state doesn’t change after it has been initialized. For example, String
is an immutable class and, once instantiated, the value of a String
object never changes. Learn more about why the String
class is immutable in Java.
Because an immutable object can’t be updated, programs need to create a new object for every change of state. However, immutable objects also have the following benefits:
Learn more about multi-threading in Java and browse the Java Multi-Threading Interview Questions.
To create an immutable class in Java, you need to follow these general principles:
final
so it can’t be extended.private
so that direct access is not allowed.final
so that a field’s value can be assigned only once.The following class is an example that illustrates the basics of immutability. The FinalClassExample
class defines the fields and provides the constructor method that uses deep copy to initialize the object. The code in the main
method of the FinalClassExample.java
file tests the immutability of the object.
Create a new file called FinalClassExample.java
and copy in the following code:
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Iterator;
public final class FinalClassExample {
// fields of the FinalClassExample class
private final int id;
private final String name;
private final HashMap<String,String> testMap;
public int getId() {
return id;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
// Getter function for mutable objects
public HashMap<String, String> getTestMap() {
return (HashMap<String, String>) testMap.clone();
}
// Constructor method performing deep copy
public FinalClassExample(int i, String n, HashMap<String,String> hm){
System.out.println("Performing Deep Copy for Object initialization");
// "this" keyword refers to the current object
this.id=i;
this.name=n;
HashMap<String,String> tempMap=new HashMap<String,String>();
String key;
Iterator<String> it = hm.keySet().iterator();
while(it.hasNext()){
key=it.next();
tempMap.put(key, hm.get(key));
}
this.testMap=tempMap;
}
// Test the immutable class
public static void main(String[] args) {
HashMap<String, String> h1 = new HashMap<String,String>();
h1.put("1", "first");
h1.put("2", "second");
String s = "original";
int i=10;
FinalClassExample ce = new FinalClassExample(i,s,h1);
// print the ce values
System.out.println("ce id: "+ce.getId());
System.out.println("ce name: "+ce.getName());
System.out.println("ce testMap: "+ce.getTestMap());
// change the local variable values
i=20;
s="modified";
h1.put("3", "third");
// print the values again
System.out.println("ce id after local variable change: "+ce.getId());
System.out.println("ce name after local variable change: "+ce.getName());
System.out.println("ce testMap after local variable change: "+ce.getTestMap());
HashMap<String, String> hmTest = ce.getTestMap();
hmTest.put("4", "new");
System.out.println("ce testMap after changing variable from getter methods: "+ce.getTestMap());
}
}
Compile and run the program:
- javac FinalClassExample.java
- java FinalClassExample
Note: You might get the following message when you compile the file: Note: FinalClassExample.java uses unchecked or unsafe operations
because the getter method is using an unchecked cast from HashMap<String,String>
to Object
. You can ignore the compiler warning for the purposes of this example.
You get the following output:
OutputPerforming Deep Copy for Object initialization
ce id: 10
ce name: original
ce testMap: {1=first, 2=second}
ce id after local variable change: 10
ce name after local variable change: original
ce testMap after local variable change: {1=first, 2=second}
ce testMap after changing variable from getter methods: {1=first, 2=second}
The output shows that the HashMap values didn’t change because the constructor uses deep copy and the getter function returns a clone of the original object.
You can make changes to the FinalClassExample.java
file to show what happens when you use shallow copy instead of deep copy and return the object insetad of a copy. The object is no longer immutable and can be changed. Make the following changes to the example file (or copy and paste from the code example):
return (HashMap<String, String>) testMap.clone();
and add return testMap;
.The example file should now look like this:
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Iterator;
public final class FinalClassExample {
// fields of the FinalClassExample class
private final int id;
private final String name;
private final HashMap<String,String> testMap;
public int getId() {
return id;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
// Getter function for mutable objects
public HashMap<String, String> getTestMap() {
return testMap;
}
//Constructor method performing shallow copy
public FinalClassExample(int i, String n, HashMap<String,String> hm){
System.out.println("Performing Shallow Copy for Object initialization");
this.id=i;
this.name=n;
this.testMap=hm;
}
// Test the immutable class
public static void main(String[] args) {
HashMap<String, String> h1 = new HashMap<String,String>();
h1.put("1", "first");
h1.put("2", "second");
String s = "original";
int i=10;
FinalClassExample ce = new FinalClassExample(i,s,h1);
// print the ce values
System.out.println("ce id: "+ce.getId());
System.out.println("ce name: "+ce.getName());
System.out.println("ce testMap: "+ce.getTestMap());
// change the local variable values
i=20;
s="modified";
h1.put("3", "third");
// print the values again
System.out.println("ce id after local variable change: "+ce.getId());
System.out.println("ce name after local variable change: "+ce.getName());
System.out.println("ce testMap after local variable change: "+ce.getTestMap());
HashMap<String, String> hmTest = ce.getTestMap();
hmTest.put("4", "new");
System.out.println("ce testMap after changing variable from getter methods: "+ce.getTestMap());
}
}
Compile and run the program:
- javac FinalClassExample.java
- java FinalClassExample
You get the following output:
OutputPerforming Shallow Copy for Object initialization
ce id: 10
ce name: original
ce testMap: {1=first, 2=second}
ce id after local variable change: 10
ce name after local variable change: original
ce testMap after local variable change: {1=first, 2=second, 3=third}
ce testMap after changing variable from getter methods: {1=first, 2=second, 3=third, 4=new}
The output shows that the HashMap values got changed because the constructor method uses shallow copy there is a direct reference to the original object in the getter function.
You’ve learned some of the general principles to follow when you create immutable classes in Java, including the importance of deep copy. Continue your learning with more Java tutorials.
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who can solve this for me? /* Edit the code by following the steps in the description */ import java.util.HashMap; import java.util.Map; public class Location { final int locationID; public String description; protected Map exits; public Location(int locationID, String description, Map exits) { this.locationID = locationID; this.description = description; this.exits = new HashMap(exits); this.exits.put(“Q”, 0); } public void addExit(String direction, int location) { exits.put(direction, location); } public void setLocationID(int locationID) { this.locationID = locationID; } public int getLocationID() { return locationID; } public void setDescription(String description) { this.description = description; } public String getDescription() { return description; } public void setExits(Map exits) { this.exits = exits; } public Map getExits() { return exits; } } Make the Location class an Immutable Class. The strategy for creating an Immutable Class is: Steps: 1. Don’t provide setters. 2. Make all fields final and private 3. Don’t allow the class to be subclassed. 4. If the instance fields include references to mutable objects, don’t allow those objects to be changed: - Don’t provide methods that modify the mutable objects. - Don’t share references to the mutable objects. As an added Task, handle the case where exits is null when passed to the constructor. NOTE: Not all classes documented as “immutable” follow these rules. However, the steps above are the basis of an Immutable Class.
- Francis
I believe deep copy will be needed for ID and Name as well. Please explain if not.
- Dinesh Solanki
HI Pankaj, I tried your code and analysed that by only returning the map.clone() object will work here no need to make deep copy in constructor.
- Lokesh Kumar
Hi, its Explained very nicely, I have one question like i have 2 classes as below. class Separtment{ int id, String name; } Class Employee{ Department Dept, int id, String name; } Here i want to make Employee as immutable, but here Department is a child object, so here how come i make Employee class is immutable. Also One constraint like the Department object which I won’t own(I am not allowed to change anything in the Department object).
- Akhil Kumar Patro
hi Pankaj, great work !!! what is the need of getter method HashMap clone as we are constructing deep clone object? thanks Aravind Sundarraj
- Aravind Sundarraj
Hi Pankaj, I have been following your site for quite some time & it has been helping me a lot… Thank you very much for that. Just one suggestion, the “scrollable” code blocks are not very user-friendly to use. It would be great if we can see the entire code at once - even though it increases the height of the page, just my personal experience…
- Shobhit Mittal
What about Date variable we can still change the date by writing d.getTime(); How can we avoid that?
- jogi
4. Make all mutable fields final so that it’s value can be assigned only once. I don’t think this is necessary if are declaring the fields private. mutable fields marked as final can still be mutated, only the reference can not be changed.
- Manohar Bhat
One of the best example and explanation for “creating immutable class”. Loved it. Thanks !!
- Mukund Padale
But when we trying to change a String object a new object would be created with those changes. Is that possible here ?. Please explain
- Sreerag