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Home/ Questions/Q 8748343
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T12:30:34+00:00 2026-06-13T12:30:34+00:00

If enum implements Comparable so why can’t compare with < or >? public class

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If enum implements Comparable so why can’t compare with < or >?

public class Dream    
{
    public static void main(String... args)
    {
        System.out.println(PinSize.BIG == PinSize.BIGGER); //false
        System.out.println(PinSize.BIG == PinSize.BIG); //true
        System.out.println(PinSize.BIG.equals(PinSize.BIGGER));//false
        System.out.println(PinSize.BIG > PinSize.BIGGERER);// compilation error
        //can't be compared
        System.out.println(PinSize.BIG.toString().equals(PinSize.BIGGER));// #4
        PinSize b = PinSize.BIG ;
        System.out.println( b instanceof Comparable);// true
    }  
}
enum PinSize { BIG, BIGGER, BIGGERER };
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T12:30:35+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 12:30 pm

    You can do this:

    PinSize.BIGGEST.ordinal() > PinSize.BIG.ordinal()  // evaluates to `true`
    

    Of course, assuming that BIGGEST was declared after BIG in the enumeration. The ordinal value in an enumeration is implicitly tied to the declaration order, by default the first value is assigned value 0, the second value 1 and so on.

    So if yo declared the enumeration like this, things will work:

    public enum PinSize {
        SMALLEST,  // ordinal value: 0
        SMALL,     // ordinal value: 1
        NORMAL,    // ordinal value: 2
        BIG,       // ordinal value: 3
        BIGGER,    // ordinal value: 4
        BIGGEST;   // ordinal value: 5
    }
    
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