Home Page
>
Learning the Java Language
>
Classes and Objects
Controlling Access to Members of a Class
Access level modifiers determine whether other classes can use a particular
field or invoke a particular method. There are two levels of access control:
- At the top level—
public, or package-private (no explicit modifier).
-
At the member level—
public, private, protected,
or package-private (no explicit modifier).
A class may be declared with the modifier public, in which case that class
is visible to all classes everywhere. If a class has no modifier (the default, also known
as package-private), it is visible only within its own package (packages are named groups of
related classes—you will learn about them in a later
lesson.)
At the member level, you can also use the public modifier or no modifier (package-private)
just as with top-level classes, and with the same meaning. For members, there are two additional
access modifiers: private and protected.
The private modifier specifies that the member can only be accessed in its own class.
The protected modifier specifies that the member can only
be accessed within its own package (as with package-private) and, in addition, by a subclass of its class in another package.
The following table shows the access to members permitted by each modifier.
Access Levels
| Modifier |
Class |
Package |
Subclass |
World |
public |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
protected |
Y |
Y |
Y |
N |
| no modifier |
Y |
Y |
N |
N |
private |
Y |
N |
N |
N |
The first data column indicates whether the class itself has access to
the member defined by the access level. As you can see, a class
always has access to its own members. The second column indicates
whether classes in the same package as the class (regardless of
their parentage) have access to the member.
The third column indicates whether subclasses of the class
declared outside this package have access to the member.
The fourth column indicates whether all classes have access to the member.
Access levels affect you in two ways. First, when you use
classes that come from another source, such as the classes in the
Java platform, access levels determine which members of those classes
your own classes can use. Second, when you write a class, you need to
decide what access level every member variable and every method in
your class should have.
Let's look at a collection of classes and see how access levels affect visibility.
The following figure shows the four classes in this
example and how they are related.

Classes and Packages of the Example Used to Illustrate Access Levels
The following table shows where the members of the Alpha class are visible for each of the access modifiers
that can be applied to them.
Visibility
| Modifier |
Alpha |
Beta |
Alphasub |
Gamma |
public |
Y |
Y |
Y |
Y |
protected |
Y |
Y |
Y |
N |
| no modifier |
Y |
Y |
N |
N |
private |
Y |
N |
N |
N |
Tips on Choosing an Access Level: If other programmers use your class, you want to ensure that errors
from misuse cannot happen. Access levels can help you do this.
- Use the most restrictive access level that makes sense for a
particular member. Use
private unless you have a good
reason not to.
- Avoid
public fields except for constants.
(Many of the examples in the
tutorial
use public fields.
This may help to illustrate some points concisely, but is not
recommended for production code.)
Public fields tend to link you to a particular implementation
and limit your flexibility in changing your code.