groovy.transform
Annotation Type TupleConstructor


@Documented
@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Target(value=TYPE)
public @interface TupleConstructor

Class annotation used to assist in the creation of tuple constructors in classes.

It allows you to write classes in this shortened form:

 @TupleConstructor class Customer {
     String first, last
     int age
     Date since
     Collection favItems
 }
 def c1 = new Customer(first:'Tom', last:'Jones', age:21, since:new Date(), favItems:['Books', 'Games'])
 def c2 = new Customer('Tom', 'Jones', 21, new Date(), ['Books', 'Games'])
 def c3 = new Customer('Tom', 'Jones')
 
The @TupleConstructor annotation instructs the compiler to execute an AST transformation which adds the necessary constructor method to your class.

A tuple constructor is created with a parameter for each property (and optionally field and super properties). A default value is provided (using Java's default values) for all parameters in the constructor. Groovy's normal conventions then allows any number of parameters to be left off the end of the parameter list including all of the parameters - giving a no-arg constructor which can be used with the map-style naming conventions.

The order of parameters is given by the properties of any super classes with most super first (if includeSuperProperties is set) followed by the properties of the class followed by the by the fields of the class (if includeFields is set). Within each grouping the order is as attributes appear within the respective class.

Limitations: currently not designed to support inner classes.

Since:
1.8.0

Optional Element Summary
 boolean callSuper
          Should super properties be called within a call to the parent constructor rather than set as properties
 java.lang.String excludes
          Comma separated list of field and/or property names to exclude from the constructor.
 boolean force
          By default, this annotation becomes a no-op if you provide your own constructor.
 boolean includeFields
          Include fields in the constructor
 boolean includeProperties
          Include properties in the constructor
 java.lang.String includes
          Comma separated list of field and/or property names to include within the constructor.
 boolean includeSuperFields
          Include fields from super classes in the constructor
 boolean includeSuperProperties
          Include properties from super classes in the constructor
 

excludes

public abstract java.lang.String excludes
Comma separated list of field and/or property names to exclude from the constructor. Must not be used if 'includes' is used.

Default:
""

includes

public abstract java.lang.String includes
Comma separated list of field and/or property names to include within the constructor. Must not be used if 'excludes' is used.

Default:
""

includeFields

public abstract boolean includeFields
Include fields in the constructor

Default:
false

includeProperties

public abstract boolean includeProperties
Include properties in the constructor

Default:
true

includeSuperFields

public abstract boolean includeSuperFields
Include fields from super classes in the constructor

Default:
false

includeSuperProperties

public abstract boolean includeSuperProperties
Include properties from super classes in the constructor

Default:
false

callSuper

public abstract boolean callSuper
Should super properties be called within a call to the parent constructor rather than set as properties

Default:
false

force

public abstract boolean force
By default, this annotation becomes a no-op if you provide your own constructor. By setting force=true then the tuple constructor(s) will be added regardless of whether existing constructors exist. It is up to you to avoid creating duplicate constructors.

Default:
false