I have a \"private static\" nested class in Java. What is the significance of access modifiers for fields and methods inside this class? I\'ve tried both public and private
Two kinds of nested classes: 1. Static (nested class) and 2. Non-static (also called inner class)
Now, the Outer class, MyList
can access all the members of the inner class Node
, but you actually use the access specifiers for the members of the class Node
(nested class) when you want restrictions of some external class accessing it.
Interesting reads: Source1, Source2
Because it is a nested class, everything in Node
can be accessed by MyList<T>
, regardless of access modifier; because it is a private nested class, nothing first declared in Node
will be visible outside of MyList<T>
.
So, the one case where the access modifier may matter are methods that override a superclass method(e.g. toString()
). You can not reduce the visibility of an overridden method. toString()
must always be declared public in order for the class to compile.
It should also be noted that when private members are accessed by the outer class, the compiler creates a synthetic method (I believe of package scope). This synthetic method is only visible in the .class file of the nested class.