The definitions of two constant expressions should be related when and only when the values they express are also related.
In this noncompliant code example, OUT_STR_LEN must always be exactly two greater than IN_STR_LEN. This is not obvious from the definitions. 
| public static final int IN_STR_LEN = 18; public static final int OUT_STR_LEN = 20; | 
The relationship between the two values should be represented in the definitions.
| public static final int IN_STR_LEN = 18; public static final int OUT_STR_LEN = IN_STR_LEN + 2; | 
In this noncompliant code example, there appears to be an underlying relationship between the two constants, when in fact there is none.
| public static final int ADULT_AGE = 18; public static final int ALCOHOL_AGE = ADULT_AGE + 3; | 
A programmer performing routine maintenance may modify the definition for ADULT_AGE but fail to recognize the resulting change in the definition for ALCOHOL_AGE.
The definitions should reflect the lack of a relationship between the two constants.
| public static final int ADULT_AGE = 18; public static final int ALCOHOL_AGE = 21; | 
Failure to properly encode relationships in constant declarations may lead to unexpected values and may complicate maintenance.
| Guideline | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCL03-J | low | unlikely | high | P1 | L3 | 
C Secure Coding Standard: DCL08-C. Properly encode relationships in constant definitions
C++ Secure Coding Standard: DCL08-CPP. Properly encode relationships in constant definitions
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this guideline on the CERT website.
| \[JLS 2005\] Section 4.12.4 | 
DCL02-J. Use meaningful symbolic constants to represent literal values in program logic 03. Declarations and Initialization (DCL) DCL04-J. Declare mathematical constants as static and final