See: Description
Interface | Description |
---|---|
AnnotationMirror |
Represents an annotation.
|
AnnotationValue |
Represents a value of an annotation type element.
|
AnnotationValueVisitor<R,P> |
A visitor of the values of annotation type elements, using a
variant of the visitor design pattern.
|
Element |
Represents a program element such as a package, class, or method.
|
ElementVisitor<R,P> |
A visitor of program elements, in the style of the visitor design
pattern.
|
ExecutableElement |
Represents a method, constructor, or initializer (static or
instance) of a class or interface, including annotation type
elements.
|
Name |
An immutable sequence of characters.
|
PackageElement |
Represents a package program element.
|
Parameterizable |
A mixin interface for an element that has type parameters.
|
QualifiedNameable |
A mixin interface for an element that has a qualified name.
|
TypeElement |
Represents a class or interface program element.
|
TypeParameterElement |
Represents a formal type parameter of a generic class, interface, method,
or constructor element.
|
VariableElement |
Represents a field,
enum constant, method or constructor
parameter, local variable, resource variable, or exception
parameter. |
Enum | Description |
---|---|
ElementKind |
The
kind of an element. |
Modifier |
Represents a modifier on a program element such
as a class, method, or field.
|
NestingKind |
The nesting kind of a type element.
|
Exception | Description |
---|---|
UnknownAnnotationValueException |
Indicates that an unknown kind of annotation value was encountered.
|
UnknownElementException |
Indicates that an unknown kind of element was encountered.
|
for
loop or try
-finally
block. However, the interfaces can model some structures only
appearing inside method bodies, such as local variables and
anonymous classes.
When used in the context of annotation processing, an accurate model of the element being represented must be returned. As this is a language model, the source code provides the fiducial (reference) representation of the construct in question rather than a representation in an executable output like a class file. Executable output may serve as the basis for creating a modeling element. However, the process of translating source code to executable output may not permit recovering some aspects of the source code representation. For example, annotations with source retention cannot be recovered from class files and class files might not be able to provide source position information. The modifiers on an element may differ in some cases including
strictfp
on a class or interface
final
on a parameter
protected
, private
, and static
on classes and interfaces
During annotation processing, operating on incomplete or
erroneous programs is necessary; however, there are fewer
guarantees about the nature of the resulting model. If the source
code is not syntactically well-formed or has some other
irrecoverable error that could not be removed by the generation of
new types, a model may or may not be provided as a quality of
implementation issue.
If a program is syntactically valid but erroneous in some other
fashion, any returned model must have no less information than if
all the method bodies in the program were replaced by "throw
new RuntimeException();"
. If a program refers to a missing type XYZ,
the returned model must contain no less information than if the
declaration of type XYZ were assumed to be "class XYZ {}"
,
"interface XYZ {}"
, "enum XYZ {}"
, or "@interface XYZ {}"
. If a program refers to a missing type XYZ<K1, ... ,Kn>
, the returned model must contain no less
information than if the declaration of XYZ were assumed to be
"class XYZ<T1, ... ,Tn> {}"
or "interface XYZ<T1,
... ,Tn> {}"
Unless otherwise specified in a particular implementation, the collections returned by methods in this package should be expected to be unmodifiable by the caller and unsafe for concurrent access.
Unless otherwise specified, methods in this package will throw
a NullPointerException
if given a null
argument.
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.