The final
keyword has several usages in Java. It corresponds to both the sealed
and readonly
keywords in C#, depending on the context in which it is used.
Classes
To prevent subclassing (inheritance from the defined class):
Java
public final class MyFinalClass {...}
C#
public sealed class MyFinalClass {...}
Methods
Prevent overriding of a virtual
method.
Java
public class MyClass
{
public final void myFinalMethod() {...}
}
C#
public class MyClass : MyBaseClass
{
public sealed override void MyFinalMethod() {...}
}
As Joachim Sauer points out, a notable difference between the two languages here is that Java by default marks all non-static methods as virtual
, whereas C# marks them as sealed
. Hence, you only need to use the sealed
keyword in C# if you want to stop further overriding of a method that has been explicitly marked virtual
in the base class.
Variables
To only allow a variable to be assigned once:
Java
public final double pi = 3.14; // essentially a constant
C#
public readonly double pi = 3.14; // essentially a constant
As a side note, the effect of the readonly
keyword differs from that of the const
keyword in that the readonly
expression is evaluated at runtime rather than compile-time, hence allowing arbitrary expressions.
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