Disclaimer: I am aware that there are two questions about the usefulness of const-correctness, however, none discussed how const-correctness is necessary in C++ as oppos
Const correctness provides two notable advantages to C++ that I can think of, one of which makes it rather unique.
const_cast you have compiler-checked safety with regards to mutable vs. immutable data.const, the compiler is free to place it in read-only memory. This can particularly matter in embedded systems. C++ supports this; few other languages do. This also means that, in the general case, you cannot safely cast const away, although in practice you can do so in most environments.C++ isn't the only language with const correctness or something like it. OCaml and Standard ML have a similar concept with different terminology — almost all data is immutable (const), and when you want something to be mutable you use a different type (a ref type) to accomplish that. So it's just unique to C++ within its neighboring languages.
Finally, coming the other direction: there have been times I have wanted const in Java. final sometimes doesn't go far enough as far as creating plainly immutable data (especially immutable views of mutable data), and don't want to create interfaces. Look at the Unmodifiable collection support in the Java API and the fact that it only checks at run time whether modification is allowed for an example of why const is useful (or at least the interface structure should be deepend to have List and MutableList) — there is no reason that attempting to mutate an immutable structure can't be a compile-type error.