groovy.lang
Annotation Type Delegate
@Retention(value=SOURCE)
@Target(value=FIELD)
public @interface Delegate
Field annotation to automatically delegate part of the functionality of a class to the annotated field.
All non-private methods present in the type of annotated field and not present in the owner class
will be added to owner class at compile time. The implementation of such automatically added
methods is code which calls through to the delegate as per the normal delegate pattern.
As an example, consider this code:
class Event {
@Delegate
Date when
String title, url
}
def gr8conf = new Event(title: "GR8 Conference",
url: "http://www.gr8conf.org",
when: Date.parse("yyyy/MM/dd", "2009/05/18"))
def javaOne = new Event(title: "JavaOne",
url: "http://java.sun.com/javaone/",
when: Date.parse("yyyy/MM/dd", "2009/06/02"))
assert gr8conf.before(javaOne.when)
In this example, the Event
class will have a method called
before(Date otherDate)
as well as other public methods of the
Date
class.
The implementation of the before()
method will look like this:
public boolean before(Date otherDate) {
return when.before(otherDate);
}
By default, the owner class will also be modified to implement any interfaces
implemented by the field. So, in the example above, because Date
implements Cloneable
the following will be true:
assert gr8conf instanceof Cloneable
This behavior can be disabled by setting the
annotation's interfaces
element to false,
i.e. @Delegate(interfaces = false)
, e.g. in the above
example, the delegate definition would become:
@Delegate
(interfaces = false) Date when
and the following would be true:
assert !(gr8conf instanceof Cloneable)
If multiple delegate fields are used and the same method signature occurs
in more than one of the respective field types, then the delegate will be
made to the first defined field having that signature. If this does occur,
it might be regarded as a smell (or at least poor style) and it might be
clearer to do the delegation by long hand.
By default, methods of the delegate type marked as @Deprecated
are
not automatically added to the owner class. You can force these methods to
be added by setting the annotation's deprecated
element to true,
i.e. @Delegate(deprecated = true)
.
For example, in the example above if we change the delegate definition to:
@Delegate
(deprecated = true) Date when
then the following additional lines will execute successfully (during 2009):
assert gr8conf.year + 1900 == 2009
assert gr8conf.toGMTString().contains(" 2009 ")
Otherwise these lines produce a groovy.lang.MissingPropertyException
or groovy.lang.MissingMethodException respectively as those two methods are
@Deprecated
in Date
.
- Author:
- Alex Tkachman, Paul King
interfaces
public abstract boolean interfaces
- Returns:
- true if owner class should implement interfaces implemented by field
- Default:
- true
deprecated
public abstract boolean deprecated
- Returns:
- true if owner class should delegate to methods annotated with @Deprecated
- Default:
- false