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	<title>@Getter and @Setter</title>
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		<div class="header"><a href="../index.html">Project Lombok</a></div>
		<h1>@Getter and @Setter</h1>
		<div class="byline">Never write <code>public int getFoo() {return foo;}</code> again.</div>
		<div class="overview">
			<h3>Overview</h3>
			<p>
			You can annotate any field with <code>@Getter</code> and/or <code>@Setter</code>, to let lombok generate the default getter/setter automatically.<br />
			A default getter simply returns the field, and is named <code>getFoo</code> if the field is called <code>foo</code> (or <code>isFoo</code>
			if the field's type is <code>boolean</code>). A default setter is named <code>setFoo</code> if the field is called <code>foo</code>, returns <code>void</code>,
			and takes 1 parameter of the same type as the field. It simply sets the field to this value.
			</p><p>
			The generated getter/setter method will be <code>public</code> unless you explicitly specify an <code>AccessLevel</code>, as shown in the example below.
			Legal access levels are <code>PUBLIC</code>, <code>PROTECTED</code>, <code>PACKAGE</code>, and <code>PRIVATE</code>.
			</p><p>
			You can also put a <code>@Getter</code> and/or <code>@Setter</code> annotation on a class. In that case, it's as if you annotate all the non-static fields in that
			class with the annotation.
			</p><p>
			You can always manually disable getter/setter generation for any field by using the special <code>AccessLevel.NONE</code> access level. This lets you override the
			behaviour of a <code>@Getter</code>, <code>@Setter</code> or <code>@Data</code> annotation on a class.
			</p>
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			<div class="pre">
				<h3>With Lombok</h3>
				<div class="snippet">@HTML_PRE@</div>
			</div>
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			<div class="post">
				<h3>Vanilla Java</h3>
				<div class="snippet">@HTML_POST@</div>
			</div>
		</div>
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		<div class="overview">
			<h3>Small print</h3><div class="smallprint">
				<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, get/set/is 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>getFoo()</code>
				will not be generated if there's already a method <code>getFoo(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 getter name.
				</p><p>
				Any variation on <code>boolean</code> will <em>not</em> result in using the <code>is</code> prefix instead of the <code>get</code> prefix; for example,
				returning <code>java.lang.Boolean</code> results in a <code>get</code> prefix, not an <code>is</code> prefix.
				</p><p>
				Any annotations named <code>@NonNull</code> (case insensitive) on the field are interpreted as: This field must not ever hold
				<em>null</em>. Therefore, these annotations result in an explicit null check in the generated setter. Also, these
				annotations (as well as any annotation named <code>@Nullable</code> or <code>@CheckForNull</code>) are copied to setter parameter and getter method.
				</p><p>
				You can annotate a class with a <code>@Getter</code> or <code>@Setter</code> annotation. Doing so is equivalent to annotating all non-static fields
				in that class with that annotation. <code>@Getter</code>/<code>@Setter</code> annotations on fields take precedence over the ones on classes.
				</p><p>
				Using the <code>AccessLevel.NONE</code> access level simply generates nothing. It's useful only in combination with
				<a href="Data.html"><code>@Data</code></a> or a class-wide <code>@Getter</code> or <code>@Setter</code>.
				</p><p>
					<code>@Getter</code> can also be used on enums. <code>@Setter</code> can't, not for a technical reason, but
					for a pragmatic one: Setters on enums are an extremely bad idea.
				</p>
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