If I need to do this, I sometimes build a Set<String> of the names, or even my own Map<String,MyEnum> – then you can just check that.
A couple of points worth noting:
- Populate any such static collection in a static initializer. Don’t use a variable initializer and then rely on it having been executed when the enum constructor runs – it won’t have been! (The enum constructors are the first things to be executed, before the static initializer.)
- Try to avoid using
values()frequently – it has to create and populate a new array each time. To iterate over all elements, useEnumSet.allOfwhich is much more efficient for enums without a large number of elements.
Sample code:
import java.util.*;
enum SampleEnum {
Foo,
Bar;
private static final Map<String, SampleEnum> nameToValueMap =
new HashMap<String, SampleEnum>();
static {
for (SampleEnum value : EnumSet.allOf(SampleEnum.class)) {
nameToValueMap.put(value.name(), value);
}
}
public static SampleEnum forName(String name) {
return nameToValueMap.get(name);
}
}
public class Test {
public static void main(String [] args)
throws Exception { // Just for simplicity!
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Foo"));
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Bar"));
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Baz"));
}
}
Of course, if you only have a few names this is probably overkill – an O(n) solution often wins over an O(1) solution when n is small enough. Here’s another approach:
import java.util.*;
enum SampleEnum {
Foo,
Bar;
// We know we'll never mutate this, so we can keep
// a local copy.
private static final SampleEnum[] copyOfValues = values();
public static SampleEnum forName(String name) {
for (SampleEnum value : copyOfValues) {
if (value.name().equals(name)) {
return value;
}
}
return null;
}
}
public class Test {
public static void main(String [] args)
throws Exception { // Just for simplicity!
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Foo"));
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Bar"));
System.out.println(SampleEnum.forName("Baz"));
}
}