Difference between public static and private static variables

private static double salary

is available only within the class and can be accessed as

salary or Employee.salary

While

 public static final String DEPARTMENT

Could be accessed from outside of this class too as follows

Employee.DEPARTMENT

public static - can be accessed from within the class as well as outside the class.

private static - can be access from within the class only.

Static's are considered to be anti-OO in OOPS.

class Dog
{
    public static string X;
    private static string y;
}

y can be accessed only from inside Dog via either Dog.y or just y. X can be accessed anywhere via Dog.X or, if you're either in the class or using using static Dog as a header, just X.


A public variable is accessible everywhere in the code - a private variable is only accessible within the class itself. In this case you're using Employee.salary within the Employee class, so that's fine.

Note that the variable being static is a completely separate matter - and methods and classes have accessibility in the same way as variables.

There are other levels of access available too - protected and the default "package" access (which can't be specified explicitly). See section 6.6 of the Java Language Specification for more details.

(As a side matter, it's also worth learning about what static means - you almost certainly don't want these variables to be statics, as they apply to each Employee rather than the Employee concept in general. It's odd for DEPARTMENT to be a constant here, too.)


  • A public variable is accessible from anywhere (well, anywhere where the class is accessible).

  • A private variable is only accessible inside the class.

  • A static variable belongs to the class rather than to an instance of a class.

  • Notice that the variable DEPARTMENT is also final, which means that it cannot be modified once it is set. This is important here because that's what saves this from being bad code -- the variable is a constant so it's okay to give things outside the class access to it.