Why use Enums instead of Constants? Which is better in terms of software design and readability

Suppose you use constant strings (or int values - the same goes for them):

// Constants for player types
public static final String ARCHER = "Archer";
public static final String WARRIOR = "Warrior";

// Constants for genders
public static final String MALE = "Male";
public static final String FEMALE = "Female";

then you end up not really knowing the type of your data - leading to potentially incorrect code:

String playerType = Constants.MALE;

If you use enums, that would end up as:

// Compile-time error - incompatible types!
PlayerType playerType = Gender.MALE;

Likewise, enums give a restricted set of values:

String playerType = "Fred"; // Hang on, that's not one we know about...

vs

PlayerType playerType = "Fred"; // Nope, that doesn't work. Bang!

Additionally, enums in Java can have more information associated with them, and can also have behaviour. Much better all round.


Enums limit you to the required set of inputs whereas even if you use constant strings you still can use other String not part of your logic.

This helps you to not make a mistake, to enter something out of the domain, while entering data and also improves the program readability.

Additionally you can always use your enums as a String if you desire. Here is a reference.


Besides not letting you to provide an incorrect value, there is yet another feature of enums that may seem minor, but in my opinion is quite important. Modern IDEs can automatically suggest values for enums, while there is no way to reliably infer the possible values of a string constant (Intellij IDEA does the latter, but only for JDK classes and popular libraries). This is especially helpful when you are exploring a new API.