I can't seem to access instance members of the surrounding class from inside an enum, as I could from inside an inner class. Does that mean enums are static? Is there any access to the scope of the surrounding class's instance, or do I have to pass the instance into the enum's method where I need it?
public class Universe {
public final int theAnswer;
public enum Planet {
// ...
EARTH(...);
// ...
// ... constructor etc.
public int deepThought() {
// -> "No enclosing instance of type 'Universe' is accessible in this scope"
return Universe.this.theAnswer;
}
}
public Universe(int locallyUniversalAnswer) {
this.theAnswer = locallyUniversalAnswer;
}
}
Yes, nested enums are implicitly static.
From the language specification section 8.9:
It wouldn't make sense to make an instance-level (non-static) inner enum class - if the enum instances were themselves tied to the outer class they'd break the enum guarantee -
e.g. if you had
For the enum values to properly act as constants, (psuedocode, ignoring access restrictions)
b1 and b2 would have to be the same objects.