Enum classes

The most basic use case for enum classes is the implementation of type-safe enums:

enum class Direction { NORTH, SOUTH, WEST, EAST } 

Each enum constant is an object. Enum constants are separated by commas.

Since each enum is an instance of the enum class, it can be initialized as:

enum class Color(val rgb: Int) { RED(0xFF0000), GREEN(0x00FF00), BLUE(0x0000FF) } 

Anonymous classes

Enum constants can declare their own anonymous classes with their corresponding methods, as well as with overriding base methods.

enum class ProtocolState { WAITING { override fun signal() = TALKING }, TALKING { override fun signal() = WAITING }; abstract fun signal(): ProtocolState } 

If the enum class defines any members, separate the constant definitions from the member definitions with a semicolon.

Implementing interfaces in enum classes

An enum class can implement an interface (but it cannot derive from a class), providing either a common implementation of interface members for all of the entries, or separate implementations for each entry within its anonymous class. This is done by adding the interfaces you want to implement to the enum class declaration as follows:

import java.util.function.BinaryOperator import java.util.function.IntBinaryOperator //sampleStart enum class IntArithmetics : BinaryOperator<Int>, IntBinaryOperator { PLUS { override fun apply(t: Int, u: Int): Int = t + u }, TIMES { override fun apply(t: Int, u: Int): Int = t * u }; override fun applyAsInt(t: Int, u: Int) = apply(t, u) } //sampleEnd fun main() { val a = 13 val b = 31 for (f in IntArithmetics.values()) { println("$f($a, $b) = ${f.apply(a, b)}") } } 

Working with enum constants

Enum classes in Kotlin have synthetic methods for listing the defined enum constants and getting an enum constant by its name. The signatures of these methods are as follows (assuming the name of the enum class is EnumClass):

EnumClass.valueOf(value: String): EnumClass EnumClass.values(): Array<EnumClass> 

The valueOf() method throws an IllegalArgumentException if the specified name does not match any of the enum constants defined in the class.

You can access the constants in an enum class in a generic way using the enumValues<T>() and enumValueOf<T>() functions:

enum class RGB { RED, GREEN, BLUE } inline fun <reified T : Enum<T>> printAllValues() { print(enumValues<T>().joinToString { it.name }) } printAllValues<RGB>() // prints RED, GREEN, BLUE 

Every enum constant has properties for obtaining its name and position in the enum class declaration:

val name: String val ordinal: Int 

The enum constants also implement the Comparable interface, with the natural order being the order in which they are defined in the enum class.

Last modified: 09 July 2021

© 2010–2021 JetBrains s.r.o. and Kotlin Programming Language contributors
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/enum-classes.html