Information about an annotation.
The API of Annotation
instances.
The API of Annotation
instances.
The main source of information about annotations is the scala.reflect.api.Annotations page.
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax Annotation(tpe, scalaArgs, javaArgs)
.
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax Annotation(tpe, scalaArgs, javaArgs)
.
Here, tpe
is the annotation type, scalaArgs
the payload of Scala annotations, and javaArgs
the payload of Java annotations.
An array argument to a Java annotation as in @Target(value={TYPE,FIELD,METHOD,PARAMETER})
An array argument to a Java annotation as in @Target(value={TYPE,FIELD,METHOD,PARAMETER})
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
API of ArrayArgument
instances.
API of ArrayArgument
instances.
The main source of information about annotations is the scala.reflect.api.Annotations page.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax ArrayArgument(args)
where args
is the argument array.
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax ArrayArgument(args)
where args
is the argument array.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
A Java annotation argument
A Java annotation argument
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
Has no special methods.
Has no special methods. Is here to provides erased identity for CompoundType
.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
A literal argument to a Java annotation as "Use X instead"
in @Deprecated("Use X instead")
A literal argument to a Java annotation as "Use X instead"
in @Deprecated("Use X instead")
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
The API of LiteralArgument
instances.
The API of LiteralArgument
instances.
The main source of information about annotations is the scala.reflect.api.Annotations page.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax LiteralArgument(value)
where value
is the constant argument.
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax LiteralArgument(value)
where value
is the constant argument.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
A nested annotation argument to a Java annotation as @Nested
in @Outer(@Nested)
.
A nested annotation argument to a Java annotation as @Nested
in @Outer(@Nested)
.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
API of NestedArgument
instances.
API of NestedArgument
instances.
The main source of information about annotations is the scala.reflect.api.Annotations page.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax NestedArgument(annotation)
where annotation
is the nested annotation.
An extractor class to create and pattern match with syntax NestedArgument(annotation)
where annotation
is the nested annotation.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
The constructor/extractor for Annotation
instances.
The constructor/extractor for ArrayArgument
instances.
The constructor/extractor for ArrayArgument
instances.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
The constructor/extractor for LiteralArgument
instances.
The constructor/extractor for LiteralArgument
instances.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
The constructor/extractor for NestedArgument
instances.
The constructor/extractor for NestedArgument
instances.
(Since version 2.11.0) Use Annotation.tree
to inspect annotation arguments
The methods available for each reflection entity, without the implementation. Since the reflection entities are later overridden by runtime reflection and macros, their API counterparts guarantee a minimum set of methods that are implemented.
Extractors provide the machinery necessary to allow pattern matching and construction of reflection entities that is similar to case classes, although the entities are only abstract types that are later overridden.
EXPERIMENTAL
This trait provides annotation support for the reflection API.
In Scala, annotations belong to one of the two categories:
When a Scala annotation that inherits from scala.annotation.StaticAnnotation or scala.annotation.ClassfileAnnotation is compiled, it is stored as special attributes in the corresponding classfile, and not as a Java annotation. Note that subclassing just scala.annotation.Annotation is not enough to have the corresponding metadata persisted for runtime reflection.
Both Java and Scala annotations are represented as typed trees carrying constructor invocations corresponding to the annotation. For instance, the annotation in
@ann(1, 2) class C
is represented asq"@new ann(1, 2)"
.Unlike Java reflection, Scala reflection does not support evaluation of constructor invocations stored in annotations into underlying objects. For instance it's impossible to go from
@ann(1, 2) class C
toann(1, 2)
, so one has to analyze trees representing annotation arguments to manually extract corresponding values. Towards that end, arguments of an annotation can be obtained viaannotation.tree.children.tail
.For more information about
Annotation
s, see the Reflection Guide: Annotations, Names, Scopes, and More