#import "_features.html" as f> <@f.scaffold title="@NoArgsConstructor, @RequiredArgsConstructor, @AllArgsConstructor" logline="Constructors made to order: Generates constructors that take no arguments, one argument per final / non-null field, or one argument for every field."> <@f.overview>
This set of 3 annotations generate a constructor that will accept 1 parameter for certain fields, and simply assigns this parameter to the field.
@NoArgsConstructor
will generate a constructor with no parameters. If this is not possible (because of final fields), a compiler error will result instead, unless @NoArgsConstructor(force = true)
is used, then all final fields are initialized with 0
/ false
/ null
. For fields with constraints, such as @NonNull
fields, no check is generated,so be aware that these constraints will generally not be fulfilled until those fields are properly initialized later. Certain java constructs, such as hibernate and the Service Provider Interface require a no-args constructor. This annotation is useful primarily in combination with either @Data
or one of the other constructor generating annotations.
@RequiredArgsConstructor
generates a constructor with 1 parameter for each field that requires special handling. All non-initialized final
fields get a parameter, as well as any fields that are marked as @NonNull
that aren't initialized where they are declared. For those fields marked with @NonNull
, an explicit null check is also generated. The constructor will throw a NullPointerException
if any of the parameters intended for the fields marked with @NonNull
contain null
. The order of the parameters match the order in which the fields appear in your class.
@AllArgsConstructor
generates a constructor with 1 parameter for each field in your class. Fields marked with @NonNull
result in null checks on those parameters.
Each of these annotations allows an alternate form, where the generated constructor is always private, and an additional static factory method that wraps around the private constructor is generated. This mode is enabled by supplying the staticName
value for the annotation, like so: @RequiredArgsConstructor(staticName="of")
. Such a static factory method will infer generics, unlike a normal constructor. This means your API users get write MapEntry.of("foo", 5)
instead of the much longer new MapEntry<String, Integer>("foo", 5)
.
To put annotations on the generated constructor, you can use onConstructor=@__({@AnnotationsHere})
, but be careful; this is an experimental feature. For more details see the documentation on the onX feature.
Static fields are skipped by these annotations.
Unlike most other lombok annotations, the existence of an explicit constructor does not stop these annotations from generating their own constructor. This means you can write your own specialized constructor, and let lombok generate the boilerplate ones as well. If a conflict arises (one of your constructors ends up with the same signature as one that lombok generates), a compiler error will occur.
@f.overview> <@f.snippets name="Constructor" /> <@f.confKeys>lombok.anyConstructor.addConstructorProperties
= [true
| false
] (default: false
)
true
, then lombok will add a @java.beans.ConstructorProperties
to generated constructors.
lombok.
[allArgsConstructor
|requiredArgsConstructor
|noArgsConstructor
].flagUsage
= [warning
| error
] (default: not set)
@AllArgsConstructor
, @RequiredArgsConstructor
or @NoArgsConstructor
) as a warning or error if configured.
lombok.anyConstructor.flagUsage
= [warning
| error
] (default: not set)
lombok.copyableAnnotations
= [A list of fully qualified types] (default: empty list)
lombok.noArgsConstructor.extraPrivate
= [true
| false
] (default: false)
true
, lombok will generate a private no-args constructor for any @Value
or @Data
annotated class, which sets all fields to default values (null / 0 / false).
Even if a field is explicitly initialized with null
, lombok will consider the requirement to avoid null as fulfilled, and will NOT consider the field as a 'required' argument. The assumption is that if you explicitly assign null
to a field that you've also marked as @NonNull
signals you must know what you're doing.
The @java.beans.ConstructorProperties
annotation is never generated for a constructor with no arguments. This also explains why @NoArgsConstructor
lacks the suppressConstructorProperties
annotation method. The generated static factory methods also do not get @ConstructorProperties
, as this annotation can only be added to real constructors.
@XArgsConstructor
can also be used on an enum definition. The generated constructor will always be private, because non-private constructors aren't legal in enums. You don't have to specify AccessLevel.PRIVATE
.
Various well known annotations about nullity cause null checks to be inserted and will be copied to the parameter. See Getter/Setter documentation's small print for more information.
The flagUsage
configuration keys do not trigger when a constructor is generated by @Data
, @Value
or any other lombok annotation.