javax.enterprise.inject.New Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
* distributed with this work for additional information
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
* to you 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 javax.enterprise.inject;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.FIELD;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.TYPE;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.METHOD;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.PARAMETER;
import static java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME;
import java.lang.annotation.Documented;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;
import javax.inject.Qualifier;
@Target( { FIELD, PARAMETER, METHOD, TYPE})
@Retention(RUNTIME)
@Documented
@Qualifier
public @interface New
{
/**
* May be used to declare a class which should be used for injection.
* This defaults to the type which is defined at the injection point.
*
* Technically this is a qualifier, but it has a very special handling
* defined by the specification. It will create a new Contextual Instance
* of the given class by calling the default constructor. The created
* Contextual Instance will be treated as being @Dependent to the
* instance the injection point belongs to.
*
* @New also works for creating Contextual Instances of classes which are
* not part of a bean archive (BDA, aka a jar with a META-INF/beans.xml).
* Note that from a practical point @New is rarely useful. If you don't have
* a beans.xml then you will most probably also not have any CDI feature in that class.
* and if you otoh do have such a BDA, then you can inject the bean directly anyway.
* The only real usage is to inject a new 'dependent' instance of a CDI bean which
* has a different scope already defined.
*
*
* Example:
*
* @Inject @New SomeClass instance;
*
*
*
* Attention: @New only works for InjectionPoints, it is not
* possible to resolve a new-bean programatically via
* {@link javax.enterprise.inject.spi.BeanManager#getBeans(java.lang.reflect.Type, java.lang.annotation.Annotation...)}
* if there was no @New InjectionPoint of that type in the scanned classes.
*
* @return the class of the bean which should be injected
*/
Class> value() default New.class;
}