diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'website/templates/features')
-rw-r--r-- | website/templates/features/With.html | 53 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | website/templates/features/experimental/Wither.html | 66 |
2 files changed, 53 insertions, 66 deletions
diff --git a/website/templates/features/With.html b/website/templates/features/With.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..35c52dab --- /dev/null +++ b/website/templates/features/With.html @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +<#import "_features.html" as f> + +<@f.scaffold title="@With" logline="Immutable 'setters' - methods that create a clone but with one changed field."> + <@f.history> + <p> + <code>@Wither</code> was introduced as experimental feature in lombok v0.11.4. + </p><p> + <code>@Wither</code> was renamed to <code>@With</code>, and moved out of experimental and into the core package, in lombok v1.18.10. + </@f.history> + + <@f.overview> + <p> + The next best alternative to a setter for an immutable property is to construct a clone of the object, but with a new value for this one field. A method to generate this clone is precisely what <code>@With</code> generates: a <code>withFieldName(newValue)</code> method which produces a clone except for the new value for the associated field. + </p><p> + For example, if you create <code>public class Point { private final int x, y; }</code>, setters make no sense because the fields are final. <code>@With</code> can generate a <code>withX(int newXValue)</code> method for you which will return a new point with the supplied value for <code>x</code> and the same value for <code>y</code>. + </p><p> + Like <a href="/features/GetterSetter"><code>@Setter</code></a>, you can specify an access level in case you want the generated with method to be something other than <code>public</code>:<br /> <code>@With(level = AccessLevel.PROTECTED)</code>. Also like <a href="/features/GetterSetter"><code>@Setter</code></a>, you can also put a <code>@With</code> annotation on a type, which means a <code>with</code> method is generated for each field (even non-final fields). + </p><p> + To put annotations on the generated method, you can use <code>onMethod=@__({@AnnotationsHere})</code>. Be careful though! This is an experimental feature. For more details see the documentation on the <a href="/features/experimental/onX">onX</a> feature. + </p><p> + javadoc on the field will be copied to generated with methods. Normally, all text is copied, and <code>@param</code> is <em>moved</em> to the with method, whilst <code>@return</code> lines are stripped from the with method's javadoc. Moved means: Deleted from the field's javadoc. It is also possible to define unique text for the with method's javadoc. To do that, you create a 'section' named <code>WITH</code>. A section is a line in your javadoc containing 2 or more dashes, then the text 'WITH', followed by 2 or more dashes, and nothing else on the line. If you use sections, <code>@return</code> and <code>@param</code> stripping / copying for that section is no longer done (move the <code>@param</code> line into the section). + </p><p> + If you have a hierarchical immutable data structure, the <a href="/features/experimental/WithBy"><code>@WithBy</code></a> feature might be more suitable than <code>@With</code> + </@f.overview> + + <@f.snippets name="With" /> + + <@f.confKeys> + <dt> + <code>lombok.with.flagUsage</code> = [<code>warning</code> | <code>error</code>] (default: not set) + </dt><dd> + Lombok will flag any usage of <code>@With</code> as a warning or error if configured. + </dd> + </@f.confKeys> + + <@f.smallPrint> + <p> + With methods cannot be generated for static fields because that makes no sense. + </p><p> + With methods can be generated for abstract classes, but this generates an abstract method with the appropriate signature. + </p><p> + When applying <code>@With</code> to a type, static fields and fields whose name start with a $ are skipped. + </p><p> + For generating the method names, the first character of the field, if it is a lowercase character, is title-cased, otherwise, it is left unmodified. Then, <code>with</code> is prefixed. + </p><p> + No method is generated if any method already exists with the same name (case insensitive) and same parameter count. For example, <code>withX(int x)</code> will not be generated if there's already a method <code>withX(String... x)</code> even though it is technically possible to make the method. This caveat exists to prevent confusion. If the generation of a method is skipped for this reason, a warning is emitted instead. Varargs count as 0 to N parameters. + </p><p> + For <code>boolean</code> fields that start with <code>is</code> immediately followed by a title-case letter, nothing is prefixed to generate the wither name. + </p><p> + Various well known annotations about nullity cause null checks to be inserted and will be copied to the parameter. See <a href="/features/GetterSetter">Getter/Setter</a> documentation's small print for more information. + </p> + </@f.smallPrint> +</@f.scaffold> diff --git a/website/templates/features/experimental/Wither.html b/website/templates/features/experimental/Wither.html deleted file mode 100644 index 00dc10b1..00000000 --- a/website/templates/features/experimental/Wither.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,66 +0,0 @@ -<#import "../_features.html" as f> - -<@f.scaffold title="@Wither" logline="Immutable 'setters' - methods that create a clone but with one changed field."> - <@f.history> - <p> - @Wither was introduced as experimental feature in lombok v0.11.4. - </p> - </@f.history> - - <@f.experimental> - <ul> - <li> - Still not sure that <code>@Wither</code> is an appropriate name for this feature. - </li><li> - Should there be an option to supply a way of cloning the input somehow? - </li><li> - Should the way that the clone is created by configurable? - </li><li> - Should we replace @Wither entirely with a builder class? - </li> - </ul> - Current status: <em>neutral</em> - More feedback requires on the items in the above list before promotion to the main package is warranted. - </@f.experimental> - - <@f.overview> - <p> - The next best alternative to a setter for an immutable property is to construct a clone of the object, but with a new value for this one field. A method to generate this clone is precisely what <code>@Wither</code> generates: a <code>withFieldName(newValue)</code> method which produces a clone except for the new value for the associated field. - </p><p> - For example, if you create <code>public class Point { private final int x, y; }</code>, setters make no sense because the fields are final. <code>@Wither</code> can generate a <code>withX(int newXValue)</code> method for you which will return a new point with the supplied value for <code>x</code> and the same value for <code>y</code>. - </p><p> - Like <a href="/features/GetterSetter"><code>@Setter</code></a>, you can specify an access level in case you want the generated wither to be something other than <code>public</code>:<br /> <code>@Wither(level = AccessLevel.PROTECTED)</code>. Also like <a href="/features/GetterSetter"><code>@Setter</code></a>, you can also put a <code>@Wither</code> annotation on a type, which means a 'wither' is generated for each field (even non-final fields). - </p><p> - To put annotations on the generated method, you can use <code>onMethod=@__({@AnnotationsHere})</code>; to put annotations on the only parameter of a generated wither method, you can use <code>onParam=@__({@AnnotationsHere})</code>. Be careful though! This is an experimental feature. For more details see the documentation on the <a href="/features/experimental/onX">onX</a> feature. - </p><p> - <em>NEW in lombok v1.12.0:</em> javadoc on the field will now be copied to generated withers. Normally, all text is copied, and <code>@param</code> is <em>moved</em> to the wither, whilst <code>@return</code> lines are stripped from the wither's javadoc. Moved means: Deleted from the field's javadoc. It is also possible to define unique text for the wither's javadoc. To do that, you create a 'section' named <code>WITHER</code>. A section is a line in your javadoc containing 2 or more dashes, then the text 'WITHER', followed by 2 or more dashes, and nothing else on the line. If you use sections, <code>@return</code> and <code>@param</code> stripping / copying for that section is no longer done (move the <code>@param</code> line into the section). - </p> - </@f.overview> - - <@f.snippets name="experimental/Wither" /> - - <@f.confKeys> - <dt> - <code>lombok.wither.flagUsage</code> = [<code>warning</code> | <code>error</code>] (default: not set) - </dt><dd> - Lombok will flag any usage of <code>@Wither</code> as a warning or error if configured. - </dd> - </@f.confKeys> - - <@f.smallPrint> - <p> - Withers cannot be generated for static fields because that makes no sense. - </p><p> - Withers can be generated for abstract classes, but this generates an abstract method with the appropriate signature. - </p><p> - When applying <code>@Wither</code> to a type, static fields and fields whose name start with a $ are skipped. - </p><p> - For generating the method names, the first character of the field, if it is a lowercase character, is title-cased, otherwise, it is left unmodified. Then, <code>with</code> is prefixed. - </p><p> - No method is generated if any method already exists with the same name (case insensitive) and same parameter count. For example, <code>withX(int x)</code> will not be generated if there's already a method <code>withX(String... x)</code> even though it is technically possible to make the method. This caveat exists to prevent confusion. If the generation of a method is skipped for this reason, a warning is emitted instead. Varargs count as 0 to N parameters. - </p><p> - For <code>boolean</code> fields that start with <code>is</code> immediately followed by a title-case letter, nothing is prefixed to generate the wither name. - </p><p> - Various well known annotations about nullity cause null checks to be inserted and will be copied to the parameter. See <a href="/features/GetterSetter">Getter/Setter</a> documentation's small print for more information. - </p> - </@f.smallPrint> -</@f.scaffold> |