Annotation Type MapConstructor


  • @Documented
    @Retention(SOURCE)
    @Target(TYPE)
    public @interface MapConstructor
    Class annotation used to assist in the creation of map constructors in classes. If the class is also annotated with @ImmutableBase, then the generated constructor will contain additional code needed for immutable classes.

    It allows you to write classes in this shortened form:

     import groovy.transform.*
    
     @TupleConstructor
     class Person {
         String first, last
     }
    
     @CompileStatic // optional
     @ToString(includeSuperProperties=true)
     @MapConstructor(pre={ super(args?.first, args?.last); args = args ?: [:] }, post = { first = first?.toUpperCase() })
     class Author extends Person {
         String bookName
     }
    
     assert new Author(first: 'Dierk', last: 'Koenig', bookName: 'ReGinA').toString() == 'Author(ReGinA, DIERK, Koenig)'
     assert new Author().toString() == 'Author(null, null, null)'
     
    The @MapConstructor annotation instructs the compiler to execute an AST transformation which adds the necessary constructor method to your class.

    A map constructor is created which sets properties, and optionally fields and super properties if the property/field name is a key within the map.

    For the above example, the generated constructor will be something like:

     public Author(java.util.Map args) {
         super(args?.first, args?.last)
         args = args ? args : [:]
         if (args.containsKey('bookName')) {
             this.bookName = args['bookName']
         }
         first = first?.toUpperCase()
     }
     

    Custom visibility:

    • The @MapConstructor annotation generates a public constructor unless an applicable VisibilityOptions annotation is also present. It can be useful to change the visibility if you want to also create a builder or provide your own static factory method for object creation. You can make the constructor private and access it from the builder or your factory method. (Note: you'll probably want to use @CompileStatic in conjunction with such an approach since dynamic Groovy currently gives the ability to access even private constructors.)
    • An optional visibilityId attribute can be specified. If present, it must match the optional id attribute of an applicable VisibilityOptions annotation. This can be useful if multiple VisibilityOptions annotations are needed.

    Custom property handling:

    • The @MapConstructor annotation supports customization using @PropertyOptions which allows a custom property handler to be defined. This is most typically used behind the scenes by the @Immutable meta-annotation but you can also define your own handler. If a custom handler is present, it will determine the code generated when initializing any property (or field).

    Known limitations/special cases:

    • The generated map constructor will have an argument of type Map unless a single property (or field) is included and the type of that property (or field) is Object, AbstractMap, Map or HashMap. In this case, the generated constructor will be of type LinkedHashMap. This allows the possibility of also adding a tuple constructor without conflict, although no such constructor is added automatically. You can disable this behavior by setting the specialNamedArgHandling annotation attribute to false. This means that for the special case mentioned above, you will not be able to also add a tuple constructor with a single Map argument but you can supply any kind of map as your argument. We'd also recommend not having both a map constructor and a tuple constructor with a single Object, AbstractMap or HashMap since it can cause confusion as to which will be called.
    Since:
    2.5.0
    See Also:
    PropertyOptions, VisibilityOptions
    • Optional Element Summary

      Optional Elements 
      Modifier and Type Optional Element Description
      boolean allNames
      Whether to include all fields and/or properties within the constructor, including those with names that are considered internal.
      boolean allProperties
      Whether to include all properties (as per the JavaBean spec) in the generated constructor.
      String[] excludes
      List of field and/or property names to exclude from the constructor.
      boolean includeFields
      Include fields in the constructor.
      boolean includeProperties
      Include properties in the constructor.
      String[] includes
      List of field and/or property names to include within the constructor.
      boolean includeStatic
      Whether to include static properties in the constructor.
      boolean includeSuperFields
      Include fields from super classes in the constructor.
      boolean includeSuperProperties
      Include properties from super classes in the constructor.
      boolean noArg
      In addition to the map constructor, provide a no-arg constructor which calls the map constructor with an empty map.
      Class post
      A Closure containing statements which will be appended to the end of the generated constructor.
      Class pre
      A Closure containing statements which will be prepended to the generated constructor.
      boolean specialNamedArgHandling
      If true, change the type of the map constructor argument from Map to LinkedHashMap only for the case where the class has a single property (or field) with a Map-like type.
      boolean useSetters
      By default, Groovy properties are set directly using their respective field.
      String visibilityId
      If specified, must match the "id" attribute in a VisibilityOptions annotation to enable a custom visibility.
    • Element Detail

      • excludes

        String[] excludes
        List of field and/or property names to exclude from the constructor. Must not be used if 'includes' is used. For convenience, a String with comma separated names can be used in addition to an array (using Groovy's literal list notation) of String values.
        Default:
        {}
      • includes

        String[] includes
        List of field and/or property names to include within the constructor. Must not be used if 'excludes' is used. For convenience, a String with comma separated names can be used in addition to an array (using Groovy's literal list notation) of String values. The default value is a special marker value indicating that no includes are defined; all fields and/or properties are included if 'includes' remains undefined and 'excludes' is explicitly or implicitly an empty list.
        Default:
        {"<DummyUndefinedMarkerString-DoNotUse>"}
      • includeProperties

        boolean includeProperties
        Include properties in the constructor.
        Default:
        true
      • includeFields

        boolean includeFields
        Include fields in the constructor. Fields come after any properties.
        Default:
        false
      • includeSuperProperties

        boolean includeSuperProperties
        Include properties from super classes in the constructor. Groovy properties, JavaBean properties and fields (in that order) from superclasses come before the members from a subclass (unless 'includes' is used to determine the order).
        Default:
        false
      • includeSuperFields

        boolean includeSuperFields
        Include fields from super classes in the constructor. Groovy properties, JavaBean properties and fields (in that order) from superclasses come before the members from a subclass (unless 'includes' is used to determine the order).
        Default:
        false
      • allProperties

        boolean allProperties
        Whether to include all properties (as per the JavaBean spec) in the generated constructor. When true, Groovy treats any explicitly created setXxx() methods as property setters as per the JavaBean specification. JavaBean properties come after any Groovy properties but before any fields for a given class (unless 'includes' is used to determine the order).
        Default:
        false
      • useSetters

        boolean useSetters
        By default, Groovy properties are set directly using their respective field. By setting useSetters=true then a writable property will be set using its setter. If turning on this flag we recommend that setters that might be called are made null-safe wrt the parameter.
        Default:
        false
      • includeStatic

        boolean includeStatic
        Whether to include static properties in the constructor.
        Default:
        false
      • allNames

        boolean allNames
        Whether to include all fields and/or properties within the constructor, including those with names that are considered internal.
        Default:
        false
      • noArg

        boolean noArg
        In addition to the map constructor, provide a no-arg constructor which calls the map constructor with an empty map.
        Default:
        false
      • specialNamedArgHandling

        boolean specialNamedArgHandling
        If true, change the type of the map constructor argument from Map to LinkedHashMap only for the case where the class has a single property (or field) with a Map-like type. This allows both a map and a tuple constructor to be used side-by-side so long as care is taken about the types used when calling.
        Default:
        true
      • visibilityId

        String visibilityId
        If specified, must match the "id" attribute in a VisibilityOptions annotation to enable a custom visibility.
        Default:
        "<DummyUndefinedMarkerString-DoNotUse>"
      • pre

        Class pre
        A Closure containing statements which will be prepended to the generated constructor. The first statement within the Closure may be "super(someArgs)" in which case the no-arg super constructor won't be called.
        Default:
        groovy.transform.Undefined.CLASS.class
      • post

        Class post
        A Closure containing statements which will be appended to the end of the generated constructor. Useful for validation steps or tweaking the populated fields/properties.
        Default:
        groovy.transform.Undefined.CLASS.class