Reputation: 6678
hello guys i'm not sure if the title is descriptive enough.what i mean is creating an enum like so
public enum Test{
ONE, TWO ,THREE
}
this looks like hard coded.if for some reason i need to add the FOUR some certain business rules evolution reasons.should i code it and deploy it again? isn't a way to let it pick the elements from a file , spring config for example or property file? THanks for reading.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 1791
Reputation: 144162
If the enum value doesn't explicitly exist in code, how could you ever use it? Test.Four
would not compile. Any code which could somehow reference Test.Four
would be invalid and would crash, until the point in time when the file is read and the new values are added.
You can, of course, use arrays or collections of values and manipulate those at runtime - load them from a file or from the database or whatever - but not enums.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 43580
I asked a similar question here. The content may be of interest.
The concensus seemed to be that Java's enum type is static by design. If you need something that can be altered at runtime, you should ideally use a different data structure.
The less preferred ideas were along the lines of extending Enum, etc.
Upvotes: 3