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Home/ Questions/Q 951285
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T23:42:39+00:00 2026-05-15T23:42:39+00:00

I understand that val keyword determines the underlying variable is a Immutable type (Cannot

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I understand that val keyword determines the underlying variable is a Immutable type (Cannot be reassigned later time). Now i come across a paragraph in programming in scala (Chapter 3, Next steps in scala – parameterize arrays with types), it states

val greetStrings: Array[String] = new Array[String](3)
greetStrings(0) = "Hello"
greetStrings(1) = ", "
greetStrings(2) = "world!\n"

These three lines of code illustrate
an important concept to understand
about Scala concerning the meaning of
val. When you define a variable with
val, the variable can’t be reassigned,
but the object to which it refers
could potentially still be changed. So
in this case, you couldn’t reassign
greetStrings to a different array;
greetStrings will always point to the
same Array[String] instance with which
it was initialized. But you can change
the elements of that Array[String]
over time, so the array itself is
mutable.

so its valid to change the elements of array. And its invalid if we define like this

greetStrings = Array("a","b","c")

It satisfies the below statement

When you define a variable with
val, the variable can’t be reassigned,
but the object to which it refers
could potentially still be changed.

but if i declare something like this

val str = "immutable string"

By the definition given in the book

what it means object to which it refers could potentially still be changed in the above line of code ??

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T23:42:40+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:42 pm

    Declaring a val does not guarantee or even imply an immutable type. It only declares what you might call in Java a final variable. The identifier cannot be re-assigned, but the value may be of a mutable type.

    In your example of a string value, you have both a val and an immutable type, String. So this identifier is neither re-assignable nor modifiable (immutable).

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