From 5fcb9284c13e58750ec6c36a1eae5869a5a52925 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Reinier Zwitserloot Date: Tue, 29 Apr 2014 22:00:30 +0200 Subject: added docs for the new onParam feature on EqualsAndHashCode, and some tiny stylistic nitpicking. --- website/features/experimental/onX.html | 6 +++--- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'website/features/experimental') diff --git a/website/features/experimental/onX.html b/website/features/experimental/onX.html index 530d98a4..78537c67 100644 --- a/website/features/experimental/onX.html +++ b/website/features/experimental/onX.html @@ -15,7 +15,7 @@

Since

- onX was introduced as experimental feature in lombok v0.11.7 (edge release only). + onX was introduced as experimental feature in lombok v0.11.8.

@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@

@AllArgsConstructor, @NoArgsConstructor, and @RequiredArgsConstructor support the onConstructor option which will put the listed annotations on the generated constructor.

- @Setter and @Wither support onParam in addition to onMethod; annotations listed will be put on the only parameter that the generated method has. + @Setter and @Wither support onParam in addition to onMethod; annotations listed will be put on the only parameter that the generated method has. @EqualsAndHashCode also supports onParam; the listed annotation(s) will be placed on the single parameter of the generated equals method, as well as any generated canEqual method.

The syntax is a little strange; to use any of the 3 onX features, you must wrap the annotations to be applied to the constructor / method / parameter in @__(@AnnotationGoesHere). To apply multiple annotations, use @__({@Annotation1, @Annotation2}). The annotations can themselves obviously have parameters as well.

@@ -60,7 +60,7 @@

Small print

- The reason of the weird syntax is to make this feature work in javac 7 compilers; the @__ type is an annotation reference to the annotation type _ (underscore) which doesn't actually exist; this makes javac 7 delay aborting the compilation process due to an error because it is possible an annotation processor will later create the _ type. Instead, lombok applies the annotations and removes the references so that the error will never actually occur. The point is: The _ type must not exist, otherwise the feature does not work. In the rare case that the _ type does exist (and is imported or in the package), you can simply add more underscores. Technically any non-existent type would work, but to maintain consistency and readability and catch erroneous use, lombok considers it an error if the 'wrapper' annotation is anything but a series of underscores. + The reason of the weird syntax is to make this feature work in javac 7 compilers; the @__ type is an annotation reference to the annotation type __ (double underscore) which doesn't actually exist; this makes javac 7 delay aborting the compilation process due to an error because it is possible an annotation processor will later create the __ type. Instead, lombok applies the annotations and removes the references so that the error will never actually occur. The point is: The __ type must not exist, otherwise the feature does not work. In the rare case that the __ type does exist (and is imported or in the package), you can simply add more underscores. Technically any non-existent type would work, but to maintain consistency and readability and catch erroneous use, lombok considers it an error if the 'wrapper' annotation is anything but a series of underscores.

To reiterate: This feature can disappear at any time; if you use this feature, be prepared to adjust your code when we find a nicer way of implementing this feature, or, if a future version of javac forces us to remove this feature entirely with no alternative.

-- cgit