Java tutorial
/* * Copyright (C) 2008 Google Inc. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package com.google.gson; import java.lang.reflect.Type; /** * This interface is implemented to create instances of a class that does not define a no-args * constructor. If you can modify the class, you should instead add a private, or public * no-args constructor. However, that is not possible for library classes, such as JDK classes, or * a third-party library that you do not have source-code of. In such cases, you should define an * instance creator for the class. Implementations of this interface should be registered with * {@link GsonBuilder#registerTypeAdapter(Type, Object)} method before Gson will be able to use * them. * <p>Let us look at an example where defining an InstanceCreator might be useful. The * {@code Id} class defined below does not have a default no-args constructor.</p> * * <pre> * public class Id<T> { * private final Class<T> clazz; * private final long value; * public Id(Class<T> clazz, long value) { * this.clazz = clazz; * this.value = value; * } * } * </pre> * * <p>If Gson encounters an object of type {@code Id} during deserialization, it will throw an * exception. The easiest way to solve this problem will be to add a (public or private) no-args * constructor as follows:</p> * * <pre> * private Id() { * this(Object.class, 0L); * } * </pre> * * <p>However, let us assume that the developer does not have access to the source-code of the * {@code Id} class, or does not want to define a no-args constructor for it. The developer * can solve this problem by defining an {@code InstanceCreator} for {@code Id}:</p> * * <pre> * class IdInstanceCreator implements InstanceCreator<Id> { * public Id createInstance(Type type) { * return new Id(Object.class, 0L); * } * } * </pre> * * <p>Note that it does not matter what the fields of the created instance contain since Gson will * overwrite them with the deserialized values specified in Json. You should also ensure that a * <i>new</i> object is returned, not a common object since its fields will be overwritten. * The developer will need to register {@code IdInstanceCreator} with Gson as follows:</p> * * <pre> * Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Id.class, new IdInstanceCreator()).create(); * </pre> * * @param <T> the type of object that will be created by this implementation. * * @author Inderjeet Singh * @author Joel Leitch */ public interface InstanceCreator<T> { /** * Gson invokes this call-back method during deserialization to create an instance of the * specified type. The fields of the returned instance are overwritten with the data present * in the Json. Since the prior contents of the object are destroyed and overwritten, do not * return an instance that is useful elsewhere. In particular, do not return a common instance, * always use {@code new} to create a new instance. * * @param type the parameterized T represented as a {@link Type}. * @return a default object instance of type T. */ public T createInstance(Type type); }