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Home/ Questions/Q 6825683
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T22:03:42+00:00 2026-05-26T22:03:42+00:00

A useful feature in Java is the option to declare a member method as

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A useful feature in Java is the option to declare a member method as final, so that it cannot be overridden in descendant classes. Is there something similar for member variables?

class Parent {
  public final void thisMethodMustRemainAsItIs() { /* ... */ }
  public String thisVariableMustNotBeHidden;
}

class Child extends Parent {
  public final void thisMethodMustRemainAsItIs() { /* ... */ }  // Causes an error
  public String thisVariableMustNotBeHidden;  // Causes no error!
}

EDIT: sorry, I should elaborate more on the scenario: I have a variable in the parent class, that should be updated by child classes (therefore it must not be private). However, if a child class creates a variable with the same name, it will THINK that it has updated the parent variable, even though it updated its own copy:

class Parent {
    protected String myDatabase = null; // Should be updated by children
    public void doSomethingWithMyDatabase() { /* ... */ }
}

class GoodChild extends Parent {
    public GoodChild() {  
      myDatabase = "123"; 
      doSomethingWithMyDatabase();
    }
}

class BadChild extends Parent {
    protected String myDatabase = null; // Hides the parent variable!
    public BadChild() {  
      myDatabase = "123";  // Updates the child and not the parent!
      doSomethingWithMyDatabase(); // NullPointerException
    }
}

This is what I want to prevent.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T22:03:42+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 10:03 pm

    declare your variable private, and use getter .

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