final is the only allowed access modifier for local variables. final local variable is not required to be initialized during declaration. final local variable allows compiler to generate an optimized code. final local variable can be used by anonymous inner class or in anonymous methods.
Initializing a final Variable You can initialize a final variable when it is declared. This approach is the most common. A final variable is called a blank final variable if it is not initialized while declaration. Below are the two ways to initialize a blank final variable.
In Java, non-static final variables can be assigned a value either in constructor or with the declaration. But, static final variables cannot be assigned value in constructor; they must be assigned a value with their declaration.
A local inner class cannot be instantiated from outside the block where it is created in. Till JDK 7, the Local inner class can access only the final local variable of the enclosing block. However, From JDK 8, it is possible to access the non-final local variable of enclosing block in the local inner class.
The point is that method-local variables from the enclosing type are actually copied to instances of anonymous classes (this is because of activation frame issues, but I won't go further into detail as this is not really relevant to the question), which is why they need to be final, because the variable in the nested type instance is not the same anymore.
So, here is the first example:
void foo() {
int a = 3;
new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
a += 3;
}
};
}
This does not compile, because you cannot reference a non-final variable in an anonymous class' method. When you add a final modifier to the declaration of a
, the value of a
would be copied into the created instance of the anonymous class you have defined. However, you will not be allowed to change the value of a
, because the changes would not be visible to the method where a
was declared.
However, anonymous classes are not static, that is, they have a reference to the enclosing instance (unless the method where they are declared is static) which you can use to modify variables of the enclosing instance:
int a = 3;
void foo() {
new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
a += 3;
}
};
}
This example does compile and it would increase a
by 3 every time the run()
method of the anonymous class' instance is called. (In this example it is never called, but it is just an example.)
So, to summarize, you need to convert the variable seatno
from a method-local variable to an instance variable of the enclosing type. Or, if it is yet, you need to remove the final modifier as final variables can only be assigned once.
Update: In Java 8, the concept of effectively final variables is introduced (see Java Language Specification). However, in the first example of this post, the variable a
is assigned multiple times, which prevents it from being effectively final. This means that this example still does not compile with Java 8. (The compile error is "Local variable a defined in an enclosing scope must be final or effectively final")
A final variable cannot change it's value (it's similar to const from C/C++).
You probably want to make it a field in a class (without the final keyword of course), not a local variable inside a function.
Instead of defining a class member variable you can also use a mutable int to achieve the same.
void foo() {
final MutableInt a = new MutableInt(3);
new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
a.add(3);
}
};
}
Since MutableInt is not primitive type (hence passed by reference) and can be reassigned this works.
I recently faced similar problem. In my case it was easier to create final array (or collection) and to add variable, that I wanted to change inside anonymous class, to this array, as below.
int a = 3;
final int[] array = new int[1];
array[0] = a;
new Runnable() {
@Override
public void run() {
array[0] += 3;
}
};
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