Use of final local variables in java [duplicate]

Firstly, the part about variables being “overridden” – final has two very different meanings. For classes and methods, it’s about inheritance; for variables it’s about being read-only.

There’s one important “feature” of final local variables: they can be used in local (typically anonymous) inner classes. Non-final local variables can’t be. That’s the primary use of final for local variables, in my experience.

public void foo() {
    final String x = "hello";
    String y = "there";

    Runnable runnable = new Runnable() {
        @Override public void run() {
            System.out.println(x); // This is valid
            System.out.println(y); // This is not
        }
    };
    runnable.run();
}

Note that as a matter of style, some people like to use final even when they’re not capturing the variable in a local inner class. I’d certainly be comfortable with final being the default, but a different modifier for “non-final”, but I find that adding the modifier explicitly everywhere is too distracting.

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