diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'website')
-rw-r--r-- | website/features/Builder.html | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | website/features/delombok.html | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | website/features/experimental/Value.html | 36 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | website/mavenrepo/index.html | 5 |
4 files changed, 55 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/website/features/Builder.html b/website/features/Builder.html index 5cf7c23e..b4731b07 100644 --- a/website/features/Builder.html +++ b/website/features/Builder.html @@ -83,12 +83,11 @@ are very complicated in order to guarantee the following properties: <ul> <li>When invoking <code>build()</code>, the produced collection will be immutable.</li> - <li>Repeatedly invoking <code>build()</code> works fine and does not corrupt any of the collections already generated.</li> - <li>Calling one of the 'adder' methods after invoking <code>build()</code> does not modify any already generated objects, and, if <code>build()</code> is later called again, + <li>Calling one of the 'adder' methods after invoking <code>build()</code> does not modify any already generated objects, and, if <code>build()</code> is later called again, another collection with all the elements added since the creation of the builder is generated.</li> <li>The produced collection will be compacted to the smallest feasible format while remaining efficient.</li> </ul> </p><p> - <code>@Singular</code> can only be applied to collection types for which lombok has a recipe to produce the singular methods. Currently, the supported types are: + <code>@Singular</code> can only be applied to collection types known to lombok. Currently, the supported types are: <ul> <li><a href="http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/package-summary.html"><code>java.util</code></a>:<ul> <li><code>Iterable</code>, <code>Collection</code>, and <code>List</code> (backed by a compacted unmodifiable <code>ArrayList</code> in the general case).</li> @@ -98,17 +97,14 @@ <li><a href="https://github.com/google/guava">Guava</a>'s <code>com.google.common.collect</code>:<ul> <li><code>ImmutableCollection</code> and <code>ImmutableList</code> (backed by the builder feature of <code>ImmutableList</code>).</li> <li><code>ImmutableSet</code> and <code>ImmutableSortedSet</code> (backed by the builder feature of those types).</li> - <li><code>ImmutableMap</code>, <code>ImmutableBiMap</code>, and ImmutableSortedMap</code> (backed by the builder feature of those types).</li> + <li><code>ImmutableMap</code>, <code>ImmutableBiMap</code>, and <code>ImmutableSortedMap</code> (backed by the builder feature of those types).</li> </ul></li> </ul> </p><p> - If your identifiers are written in common english, lombok assumes that any collection with <code>@Singular</code> on it is an english plural and will attempt to automatically - singularize it. If this is possible, the add-one method will use this name. For example, if your collection is called <code>statuses</code>, then the add-one method will automatically - be called <code>status</code>. If lombok cannot singularize your identifier, or it is ambiguous, lombok will generate an error and force you to explicitly specify the singular name. - To do this, just pass the singular name as string, like so: <code>@Singular("axis") List<Line> axes;</code>. - </p><p> - When using the <code>java.util</code> interfaces, lombok always uses <code>ArrayList</code> to store items added to the builder, because this is more efficient than adding them to a map or - set immediately, as lombok needs to compact and potentially duplicate the result. + If your identifiers are written in common english, lombok assumes that the name of any collection with <code>@Singular</code> on it is an english plural and will attempt to automatically + singularize that name. If this is possible, the add-one method will use this name. For example, if your collection is called <code>statuses</code>, then the add-one method will automatically + be called <code>status</code>. You can also specify the singular form of your identifier explictly by passing the singular form as argument to the annotation like so: <code>@Singular("axis") List<Line> axes;</code>.<br /> + If lombok cannot singularize your identifier, or it is ambiguous, lombok will generate an error and force you to explicitly specify the singular name. </p><p> The snippet below does not show what lombok generates for a <code>@Singular</code> field/parameter because it is rather complicated. You can view a snippet <a href="Singular-snippet.html">here</a>. @@ -132,9 +128,9 @@ <dt><code>lombok.builder.flagUsage</code> = [<code>warning</code> | <code>error</code>] (default: not set)</dt> <dd>Lombok will flag any usage of <code>@Builder</code> as a warning or error if configured.</dd> <dt><code>lombok.singular.useGuava</code> = [<code>true</code> | <code>false</code>] (default: false)</dt> - <dd>If <code>true</code>, lombok will use guava's <code>ImmutableX</code> builders and types to implement <code>java.util</code> collection interfaces, instead of creating - implementations based on <code>Collections.unmodifiableX</code>. You must ensure that guava is actually available on the classpath and buildpath if you use this setting. - Guava is used automatically if your field/parameter has one of the guava <code>ImmutableX</code> types. + <dd>If <code>true</code>, lombok will use guava's <code>ImmutableXxx</code> builders and types to implement <code>java.util</code> collection interfaces, instead of creating + implementations based on <code>Collections.unmodifiableXxx</code>. You must ensure that guava is actually available on the classpath and buildpath if you use this setting. + Guava is used automatically if your field/parameter has one of the guava <code>ImmutableXxx</code> types. <dt><code>lombok.singular.auto</code> = [<code>true</code> | <code>false</code>] (default: true)</dt> <dd>If <code>true</code> (which is the default), lombok automatically tries to singularize your identifier name by assuming that it is a common english plural. If <code>false</code>, you must always explicitly specify the singular name, and lombok will generate an error if you don't (useful if you write your code in a language other than english). @@ -146,9 +142,11 @@ @Singular support for <code>java.util.NavigableMap/Set</code> only works if you are compiling with JDK1.8 or higher. </p><p> You cannot manually provide some or all parts of a <code>@Singular</code> node; the code lombok generates is too complex for this. If you want to - manually control (part of) the builder nodes associated with some field or parameter, don't use @Singular and add everything you need manually. + manually control (part of) the builder code associated with some field or parameter, don't use <code>@Singular</code> and add everything you need manually. </p><p> The sorted collections (java.util: <code>SortedSet</code>, <code>NavigableSet</code>, <code>SortedMap</code>, <code>NavigableMap</code> and guava: <code>ImmutableSortedSet</code>, <code>ImmutableSortedMap</code>) require that the type argument of the collection has natural order (implements <code>java.util.Comparable</code>). There is no way to pass an explicit <code>Comparator</code> to use in the builder. + </p><p> + An <code>ArrayList</code> is used to store added elements as call methods of a <code>@Singular</code> marked field, if the target collection is from the <code>java.util</code> package, <em>even if the collection is a set or map</em>. Because lombok ensures that generated collections are compacted, a new backing instance of a set or map must be constructed anyway, and storing the data as an <code>ArrayList</code> during the build process is more efficient that storing it as a map or set. This behaviour is not externally visible, an an implementation detail of the current implementation of the <code>java.util</code> recipes for <code>@Singular @Builder</code>. </p> </div> </div> diff --git a/website/features/delombok.html b/website/features/delombok.html index 30f21c04..dbd7b51f 100644 --- a/website/features/delombok.html +++ b/website/features/delombok.html @@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ <code>lombok.jar</code> includes an ant task which can apply delombok for you. For example, to create javadoc for your project, your <code>build.xml</code> file would look something like: <div class="snippet"><pre><target name="javadoc"> - <taskdef classname="lombok.delombok.ant.DelombokTask" classpath="lib/lombok.jar" name="delombok" /> + <taskdef classname="lombok.delombok.ant.Tasks$Delombok" classpath="lib/lombok.jar" name="delombok" /> <mkdir dir="build/src-delomboked" /> <strong><delombok verbose="true" encoding="UTF-8" to="build/src-delomboked" from="src"></strong> <strong><format value="suppressWarnings:skip" /></strong> diff --git a/website/features/experimental/Value.html b/website/features/experimental/Value.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c2b335e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/website/features/experimental/Value.html @@ -0,0 +1,36 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html> +<html><head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> + <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../logi/reset.css" /> + <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../features.css" /> + <link rel="shortcut icon" href="../../favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon" /> + <meta name="description" content="Spice up your java" /> + <title>EXPERIMENTAL - @Value</title> +</head><body><div id="pepper"> + <div class="minimumHeight"></div> + <div class="meat"> + <div class="header"><a href="../../index.html">Project Lombok</a></div> + <h1>@Value</h1> + <div class="byline">Immutable classes made very easy.</div> + <div class="moved"> + @Value has been promoted to the core package in lombok release v1.12.0.<br /> + The documentation has been moved here: <a href="../Value.html">@lombok.Value</a>. + </div> + <div class="footer"> + <a href="index.html">Back to experimental features</a><br /> + <a href="../../credits.html" class="creditsLink">credits</a> | <span class="copyright">Copyright © 2009-2015 The Project Lombok Authors, licensed under the <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php">MIT license</a>.</span> + </div> + <div style="clear: both;"></div> + </div> +</div> +<script type="text/javascript"> + var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); + document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); +</script> +<script type="text/javascript"> + try { + var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-9884254-1"); + pageTracker._trackPageview(); + } catch(err) {} +</script> +</body></html> diff --git a/website/mavenrepo/index.html b/website/mavenrepo/index.html index 01227bbd..29716920 100644 --- a/website/mavenrepo/index.html +++ b/website/mavenrepo/index.html @@ -60,6 +60,11 @@ You can use lombok with ivy by adding the following to your <strong>ivy.xml</strong>: <div class="snippet"><dependency org="org.projectlombok" name="lombok" rev="@VERSION@" conf="build" /></div> </div> + <h2>SBT</h2> + <div> + You can use lombok with SBT by adding the following to your <strong>build.sbt</strong>: + <div class="snippet">libraryDependencies += "org.projectlombok" % "lombok" % "@VERSION@"</div> + </div> <h2>Gradle</h2> <div> You can use lombok with gradle by adding the following to your <strong>build.gradle</strong> in the <strong>dependencies</strong> block: |