Java#39;s final vs. C++#39;s const(Java 的 final 与 C++ 的 const)
问题描述
The Java for C++ programmers tutorial says that (highlight is my own):
The keyword final is roughly equivalent to const in C++
What does "roughly" mean in this context? Aren't they exactly the same?
What are the differences, if any?
In C++ marking a member function const
means it may be called on const
instances. Java does not have an equivalent to this. E.g.:
class Foo {
public:
void bar();
void foo() const;
};
void test(const Foo& i) {
i.foo(); //fine
i.bar(); //error
}
Values can be assigned, once, later in Java only e.g.:
public class Foo {
void bar() {
final int a;
a = 10;
}
}
is legal in Java, but not C++ whereas:
public class Foo {
void bar() {
final int a;
a = 10;
a = 11; // Not legal, even in Java: a has already been assigned a value.
}
}
In both Java and C++ member variables may be final
/const
respectively. These need to be given a value by the time an instance of the class is finished being constructed.
In Java they must be set before the constructor has finished, this can be achieved in one of two ways:
public class Foo {
private final int a;
private final int b = 11;
public Foo() {
a = 10;
}
}
In C++ you will need to use initialisation lists to give const
members a value:
class Foo {
const int a;
public:
Foo() : a(10) {
// Assignment here with = would not be legal
}
};
In Java final can be used to mark things as non-overridable. C++ (pre-C++11) does not do this. E.g.:
public class Bar {
public final void foo() {
}
}
public class Error extends Bar {
// Error in java, can't override
public void foo() {
}
}
But in C++:
class Bar {
public:
virtual void foo() const {
}
};
class Error: public Bar {
public:
// Fine in C++
virtual void foo() const {
}
};
this is fine, because the semantics of marking a member function const
are different. (You could also overload by only having the const
on one of the member functions. (Note also that C++11 allows member functions to be marked final, see the C++11 update section)
C++11 update:
C++11 does in fact allow you to mark both classes and member functions as final
, with identical semantics to the same feature in Java, for example in Java:
public class Bar {
public final void foo() {
}
}
public class Error extends Bar {
// Error in java, can't override
public void foo() {
}
}
Can now be exactly written in C++11 as:
class Bar {
public:
virtual void foo() final;
};
class Error : public Bar {
public:
virtual void foo() final;
};
I had to compile this example with a pre-release of G++ 4.7. Note that this does not replace const
in this case, but rather augments it, providing the Java-like behaviour that wasn't seen with the closest equivalent C++ keyword. So if you wanted a member function to be both final
and const
you would do:
class Bar {
public:
virtual void foo() const final;
};
(The order of const
and final
here is required).
Previously there wasn't a direct equivalent of const
member functions although making functions non-virtual
would be a potential option albeit without causing an error at compile time.
Likewise the Java:
public final class Bar {
}
public class Error extends Bar {
}
becomes in C++11:
class Bar final {
};
class Error : public Bar {
};
(Previously private
constructors was probably the closest you could get to this in C++)
Interestingly, in order to maintain backwards compatibility with pre-C++11 code final
isn't a keyword in the usual way. (Take the trivial, legal C++98 example struct final;
to see why making it a keyword would break code)
这篇关于Java 的 final 与 C++ 的 const的文章就介绍到这了,希望我们推荐的答案对大家有所帮助,也希望大家多多支持编程学习网!
本文标题为:Java 的 final 与 C++ 的 const
基础教程推荐
- 由于对所需库 rt.jar 的限制,对类的访问限制? 2022-01-01
- 如何对 HashSet 进行排序? 2022-01-01
- 在螺旋中写一个字符串 2022-01-01
- Spring Boot Freemarker从2.2.0升级失败 2022-01-01
- 首次使用 Hadoop,MapReduce Job 不运行 Reduce Phase 2022-01-01
- Java 中保存最后 N 个元素的大小受限队列 2022-01-01
- 如何使用 Stream 在集合中拆分奇数和偶数以及两者的总和 2022-01-01
- 如何在不安装整个 WTP 包的情况下将 Tomcat 8 添加到 Eclipse Kepler 2022-01-01
- 如何使用 Eclipse 检查调试符号状态? 2022-01-01
- 如何强制对超级方法进行多态调用? 2022-01-01