You can't put a space in the middle of an identifier.
Conventional Java values would be:
INDIA, // Or India,
RUSSIA, // Russia,
NORTH_AMERICA; // NorthAmerica;
An enum with properties can associate human-readable data with values, e.g.,
public enum CountryAndOneContinent {
INDIA("India"),
RUSSIA("Russia"),
NORTH_AMERICA("North America");
private String displayName;
CountryAndOneContinent(String displayName) {
this.displayName = displayName;
}
public String displayName() { return displayName; }
// Optionally and/or additionally, toString.
@Override public String toString() { return displayName; }
}
I'm ambivalent about using toString to provide presentation-layer representations.
I prefer methods communicate their purpose explicitly–it's more expressive and obvious.
toString is pretty generic, and allows only a single representation. Multiple output formats may be required depending on context, parameters, etc. which toString doesn't allow.
Advantages of toString include using default string operations on the object, and in this case, using valueOf to directly translate from the human-readable version to the enum value.
myEnum x = myEnum.north America. These won't be compiable because if one would allow such names, where to set the end of an identifier? Maybe the next code line or statement should be included? – Matten Dec 5 '11 at 17:24