# How do I... This page answers common how-to questions that may come up when using AutoValue. You should read and understand the [Introduction](index.md) first. Questions specific to usage of the **builder option** are documented separately; for this, start by reading [AutoValue with builders](builders.md). ## Contents How do I... * ... [also generate a **builder** for my value class?](#builder) * ... [use AutoValue with a **nested** class?](#nested) * ... [use (or not use) JavaBeans-style name **prefixes**?](#beans) * ... [use **nullable** properties?](#nullable) * ... [perform other **validation**?](#validate) * ... [use a property of a **mutable** type?](#mutable_property) * ... [use a **custom** implementation of `equals`, etc.?](#custom) * ... [have AutoValue implement a concrete or default method?](#concrete) * ... [have multiple **`create`** methods, or name it/them differently?](#create) * ... [**ignore** certain properties in `equals`, etc.?](#ignore) * ... [have AutoValue also implement abstract methods from my **supertypes**?](#supertypes) * ... [use AutoValue with a **generic** class?](#generic) * ... [make my class Java- or GWT\-**serializable**?](#serialize) * ... [use AutoValue to **implement** an **annotation** type?](#annotation) * ... [also include **setter** (mutator) methods?](#setters) * ... [also generate **`compareTo`**?](#compareTo) * ... [use a **primitive array** for a property value?](#primitive_array) * ... [use an **object array** for a property value?](#object_array) * ... [have one `@AutoValue` class **extend** another?](#inherit) * ... [keep my accessor methods **private**?](#private_accessors) * ... [expose a **constructor**, not factory method, as my public creation API?](#public_constructor) * ... [use AutoValue on an **interface**, not abstract class?](#interface) * ... [**memoize** ("cache") derived properties?](#memoize) * ... [memoize the result of `hashCode` or `toString`?](#memoize_hash_tostring) * ... [make a class where only one of its properties is ever set?](#oneof) * ... [copy annotations from a class/method to the implemented class/method/field?](#copy_annotations) ## ... also generate a builder for my value class? Please see [AutoValue with builders](builders.md). ## ... use AutoValue with a nested class? AutoValue composes the generated class name in the form `AutoValue_`*`Outer_Middle_Inner`*. As many of these segments will be used in the generated name as required. Only the simple class name will appear in `toString` output. ```java class Outer { static class Middle { @AutoValue abstract static class Inner { static Inner create(String foo) { return new AutoValue_Outer_Middle_Inner(foo); } ... ``` ## ... use (or not use) JavaBeans-style name prefixes? Some developers prefer to name their accessors with a `get-` or `is-` prefix, but would prefer that only the "bare" property name be used in `toString` and for the generated constructor's parameter names. AutoValue will do exactly this, but only if you are using these prefixes *consistently*. In that case, it infers your intended property name by first stripping the `get-` or `is-` prefix, then adjusting the case of what remains as specified by [Introspector.decapitalize](http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/beans/Introspector.html#decapitalize). Note that, in keeping with the JavaBeans specification, the `is-` prefix is only allowed on `boolean`-returning methods. `get-` is allowed on any type of accessor. ## ... use nullable properties? Ordinarily the generated constructor will reject any null values. If you want to accept null, simply apply any annotation named `@Nullable` to the appropriate accessor methods. This causes AutoValue to remove the null checks and generate null-friendly code for `equals`, `hashCode` and `toString`. Example: ```java @AutoValue public abstract class Foo { public static Foo create(@Nullable Bar bar) { return new AutoValue_Foo(bar); } @Nullable abstract Bar bar(); } ``` This example also shows annotating the corresponding `create` parameter with `@Nullable`. AutoValue does not actually require this annotation, only the one on the accessor, but we recommended it as useful documentation to your caller. Conversely, if `@Nullable` is only added to the parameter in `create` (or similarly the setter method of [AutoValue.Builder](builders)), but not the corresponding accessor method, it won't have any effect. ## ... perform other validation? Null checks are added automatically (as [above](#nullable)). For other types of precondition checks or pre-processing, just add them to your factory method: ```java static MyType create(String first, String second) { checkArgument(!first.isEmpty()); return new AutoValue_MyType(first, second.trim()); } ``` ## ... use a property of a mutable type? AutoValue classes are meant and expected to be immutable. But sometimes you would want to take a mutable type and use it as a property. In these cases: First, check if the mutable type has a corresponding immutable cousin. For example, the types `List` and `String[]` have the immutable counterpart `ImmutableList` in [Guava](http://github.com/google/guava). If so, use the immutable type for your property, and only accept the mutable type during construction: ```java @AutoValue public abstract class ListExample { public static ListExample create(String[] mutableNames) { return new AutoValue_ListExample(ImmutableList.copyOf(mutableNames)); } public abstract ImmutableList names(); } ``` Note: this is a perfectly sensible practice, not an ugly workaround! If there is no suitable immutable type to use, you'll need to proceed with caution. Your static factory method should pass a *clone* of the passed object to the generated constructor. Your accessor method should document a very loud warning never to mutate the object returned. ```java @AutoValue public abstract class MutableExample { public static MutableExample create(MutablePropertyType ouch) { // Replace `MutablePropertyType.copyOf()` below with the right copying code for this type return new AutoValue_MutableExample(MutablePropertyType.copyOf(ouch)); } /** * Returns the ouch associated with this object; do not mutate the * returned object. */ public abstract MutablePropertyType ouch(); } ``` Warning: this is an ugly workaround, not a perfectly sensible practice! Callers can trivially break the invariants of the immutable class by mutating the accessor's return value. An example where something can go wrong: AutoValue objects can be used as keys in Maps. ## ... use a custom implementation of `equals`, etc.? Simply write your custom implementation; AutoValue will notice this and will skip generating its own. Your hand-written logic will thus be inherited on the concrete implementation class. We call this *underriding* the method. Remember when doing this that you are losing AutoValue's protections. Be careful to follow the basic rules of hash codes: equal objects must have equal hash codes *always*, and equal hash codes should imply equal objects *almost always*. You should now test your class more thoroughly, ideally using [`EqualsTester`](http://static.javadoc.io/com.google.guava/guava-testlib/19.0/com/google/common/testing/EqualsTester.html) from [guava-testlib](http://github.com/google/guava). Best practice: mark your underriding methods `final` to make it clear to future readers that these methods aren't overridden by AutoValue. ## ... have AutoValue implement a concrete or default method? If a parent class defines a concrete (non-abstract) method that you would like AutoValue to implement, you can *redeclare* it as abstract. This applies to `Object` methods like `toString()`, but also to property methods that you would like to have AutoValue implement. It also applies to default methods in interfaces. ```java @AutoValue class PleaseOverrideExample extends SuperclassThatDefinesToString { ... // cause AutoValue to generate this even though the superclass has it @Override public abstract String toString(); } ``` ```java @AutoValue class PleaseReimplementDefaultMethod implements InterfaceWithDefaultMethod { ... // cause AutoValue to implement this even though the interface has a default // implementation @Override public abstract int numberOfLegs(); } ``` ## ... have multiple `create` methods, or name it/them differently? Just do it! AutoValue doesn't actually care. This [best practice item](practices.md#one_reference) may be relevant. ## ... ignore certain properties in `equals`, etc.? Suppose your value class has an extra field that shouldn't be included in `equals` or `hashCode` computations. If this is because it is a derived value based on other properties, see [How do I memoize derived properties?](#memoize). Otherwise, first make certain that you really want to do this. It is often, but not always, a mistake. Remember that libraries will treat two equal instances as absolutely *interchangeable* with each other. Whatever information is present in this extra field could essentially "disappear" when you aren't expecting it, for example when your value is stored and retrieved from certain collections. If you're sure, here is how to do it: ```java @AutoValue abstract class IgnoreExample { static IgnoreExample create(String normalProperty, String ignoredProperty) { IgnoreExample ie = new AutoValue_IgnoreExample(normalProperty); ie.ignoredProperty = ignoredProperty; return ie; } abstract String normalProperty(); private String ignoredProperty; // sadly, it can't be `final` final String ignoredProperty() { return ignoredProperty; } } ``` Note that this means the field is also ignored by `toString`; to AutoValue it simply doesn't exist. ## ... have AutoValue also implement abstract methods from my supertypes? AutoValue will recognize every abstract accessor method whether it is defined directly in your own hand-written class or in a supertype. These abstract methods can come from more than one place, for example from an interface and from the superclass. It may not then be obvious what order they are in, even though you need to know this order if you want to call the generated `AutoValue_Foo` constructor. You might find it clearer to use a [builder](builders.md) instead. But the order is deterministic: within a class or interface, methods are in the order they appear in the source code; methods in ancestors come before methods in descendants; methods in interfaces come before methods in classes; and in a class or interface that has more than one superinterface, the interfaces are in the order of their appearance in `implements` or `extends`. ## ... use AutoValue with a generic class? There's nothing to it: just add type parameters to your class and to your call to the generated constructor. ## ... make my class Java- or GWT\-serializable? Just add `implements Serializable` or the `@GwtCompatible(serializable = true)` annotation (respectively) to your hand-written class; it (as well as any `serialVersionUID`) will be duplicated on the generated class, and you'll be good to go. ## ... use AutoValue to implement an annotation type? Most users should never have the need to programmatically create "fake" annotation instances. But if you do, using `@AutoValue` in the usual way will fail because the `Annotation.hashCode` specification is incompatible with AutoValue's behavior. However, we've got you covered anyway! Suppose this annotation definition: ```java public @interface Named { String value(); } ``` All you need is this: ```java public class Names { @AutoAnnotation public static Named named(String value) { return new AutoAnnotation_Names_named(value); } } ``` For more details, see the [`AutoAnnotation` javadoc](http://github.com/google/auto/blob/master/value/src/main/java/com/google/auto/value/AutoAnnotation.java#L24). ## ... also include setter (mutator) methods? You can't; AutoValue only generates immutable value classes. Note that giving value semantics to a mutable type is widely considered a questionable practice in the first place. Equal instances of a value class are treated as *interchangeable*, but they can't truly be interchangeable if one might be mutated and the other not. ## ... also generate `compareTo`? AutoValue intentionally does not provide this feature. It is better for you to roll your own comparison logic using the new methods added to [`Comparator`](https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/Comparator.html) in Java 8, or [`ComparisonChain`](https://guava.dev/releases/snapshot/api/docs/com/google/common/collect/ComparisonChain.html) from [Guava](http://github.com/google/guava). Since these mechanisms are easy to use, require very little code, and give you the flexibility you need, there's really no way for AutoValue to improve on them! ## ... use a primitive array for a property value? Go right ahead! AutoValue will generate code that acts on the *values* stored the array, not the object identity of the array itself, which is (with virtual certainty) what you want. Heed the warnings given above about [mutable properties](#mutable_property). ## ... use an object array for a property value? This is not allowed. Object arrays are very badly-behaved and unlike primitive arrays, they can be replaced with a proper `List` implementation for very little added cost. If it's important to accept an object array at construction time, refer to the *first* example shown [here](#mutable_property). ## ... have one `@AutoValue` class extend another? This ability is intentionally not supported, because there is no way to do it correctly. See *Effective Java, 2nd Edition* Item 8: "Obey the general contract when overriding equals". ## ... keep my accessor methods private? We're sorry. This is one of the rare and unfortunate restrictions AutoValue's approach places on your API. Your accessor methods don't have to be *public*, but they must be at least package-visible. ## ... expose a constructor, not factory method, as my public creation API? We're sorry. This is one of the rare restrictions AutoValue's approach places on your API. However, note that static factory methods are recommended over public constructors by *Effective Java*, Item 1. ## ... use AutoValue on an interface, not abstract class? AutoValue classes can certainly implement an interface, however an interface may not be used in lieu of an abstract class. The only advantage of interfaces we're aware of is that you can omit `public abstract` from the methods. That's not much. On the other hand, you would lose the immutability guarantee, and you'd also invite more of the kind of bad behavior described in [this best-practices item](practices.md#simple). On balance, we don't think it's worth it. ## ... memoize ("cache") derived properties? Sometimes your class has properties that are derived from the ones that AutoValue implements. You'd typically implement them with a concrete method that uses the other properties: ```java @AutoValue abstract class Foo { abstract Bar barProperty(); String derivedProperty() { return someFunctionOf(barProperty()); } } ``` But what if `someFunctionOf(Bar)` is expensive? You'd like to calculate it only one time, then cache and reuse that value for all future calls. Normally, thread-safe lazy initialization involves a lot of tricky boilerplate. Instead, just write the derived-property accessor method as above, and annotate it with [`@Memoized`]. Then AutoValue will override that method to return a stored value after the first call: ```java @AutoValue abstract class Foo { abstract Bar barProperty(); @Memoized String derivedProperty() { return someFunctionOf(barProperty()); } } ``` Then your method will be called at most once, even if multiple threads attempt to access the property concurrently. The annotated method must have the usual form of an accessor method, and may not be `abstract`, `final`, or `private`. The stored value will not be used in the implementation of `equals`, `hashCode`, or `toString`. If a `@Memoized` method is also annotated with `@Nullable`, then `null` values will be stored; if not, then the overriding method throws `NullPointerException` when the annotated method returns `null`. [`@Memoized`]: https://github.com/google/auto/blob/master/value/src/main/java/com/google/auto/value/extension/memoized/Memoized.java ## ... memoize the result of `hashCode` or `toString`? You can also make your class remember and reuse the result of `hashCode`, `toString`, or both, like this: ```java @AutoValue abstract class Foo { abstract Bar barProperty(); @Memoized @Override public abstract int hashCode(); @Memoized @Override public abstract String toString(); } ``` ## ... make a class where only one of its properties is ever set? Often, the best way to do this is using inheritance. Although one `@AutoValue` class can't inherit from another, two `@AutoValue` classes can inherit from a common parent. ```java public abstract class StringOrInteger { public abstract String representation(); public static StringOrInteger ofString(String s) { return new AutoValue_StringOrInteger_StringValue(s); } public static StringOrInteger ofInteger(int i) { return new AutoValue_StringOrInteger_IntegerValue(i); } @AutoValue abstract static class StringValue extends StringOrInteger { abstract String string(); @Override public String representation() { return '"' + string() + '"'; } } @AutoValue abstract static class IntegerValue extends StringOrInteger { abstract int integer(); @Override public String representation() { return Integer.toString(integer()); } } } ``` So any `StringOrInteger` instance is actually either a `StringValue` or an `IntegerValue`. Clients only care about the `representation()` method, so they don't need to know which it is. But if clients of your class may want to take different actions depending on which property is set, there is an alternative to `@AutoValue` called `@AutoOneOf`. This effectively creates a [*tagged union*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagged_union). Here is `StringOrInteger` written using `@AutoOneOf`, with the `representation()` method moved to a separate client class: ```java @AutoOneOf(StringOrInteger.Kind.class) public abstract class StringOrInteger { public enum Kind {STRING, INTEGER} public abstract Kind getKind(); public abstract String string(); public abstract int integer(); public static StringOrInteger ofString(String s) { return AutoOneOf_StringOrInteger.string(s); } public static StringOrInteger ofInteger(int i) { return AutoOneOf_StringOrInteger.integer(i); } } public class Client { public String representation(StringOrInteger stringOrInteger) { switch (stringOrInteger.getKind()) { case STRING: return '"' + stringOrInteger.string() + '"'; case INTEGER: return Integer.toString(stringOrInteger.integer()); } throw new AssertionError(stringOrInteger.getKind()); } } ``` Switching on an enum like this can lead to more robust code than using `instanceof` checks, especially if a tool like [Error Prone](https://errorprone.info/bugpattern/MissingCasesInEnumSwitch) can alert you if you add a new variant without updating all your switches. (On the other hand, if nothing outside your class references `getKind()`, you should consider if a solution using inheritance might be better.) There must be an enum such as `Kind`, though it doesn't have to be called `Kind` and it doesn't have to be nested inside the `@AutoOneOf` class. There must be an abstract method returning the enum, though it doesn't have to be called `getKind()`. For every value of the enum, there must be an abstract method with the same name (ignoring case and underscores). An `@AutoOneOf` class called `Foo` will then get a generated class called `AutoOneOf_Foo` that has a static factory method for each property, with the same name. In the example, the `STRING` value in the enum corresponds to the `string()` property and to the `AutoOneOf_StringOrInteger.string` factory method. Properties in an `@AutoOneOf` class can be `void` to indicate that the corresponding variant has no data. In that case, the factory method for that variant has no parameters: ```java @AutoOneOf(Transform.Kind.class) public abstract class Transform { public enum Kind {NONE, CIRCLE_CROP, BLUR} public abstract Kind getKind(); abstract void none(); abstract void circleCrop(); public abstract BlurTransformParameters blur(); public static Transform ofNone() { return AutoOneOf_Transform.none(); } public static Transform ofCircleCrop() { return AutoOneOf_Transform.circleCrop(); } public static Transform ofBlur(BlurTransformParmeters params) { return AutoOneOf_Transform.blur(params); } } ``` Here, the `NONE` and `CIRCLE_CROP` variants have no associated data but are distinct from each other. The `BLUR` variant does have data. The `none()` and `circleCrop()` methods are package-private; they must exist to configure `@AutoOneOf`, but calling them is not very useful. (It does nothing if the instance is of the correct variant, or throws an exception otherwise.) The `AutoOneOf_Transform.none()` and `AutoOneOf_Transform.circleCrop()` methods return the same instance every time they are called. If one of the `void` variants means "none", consider using an `Optional` or a `@Nullable Transform` instead of that variant. Properties in an `@AutoOneOf` class cannot be null. Instead of a `StringOrInteger` with a `@Nullable String`, you probably want a `@Nullable StringOrInteger` or an `Optional`, or an empty variant as just described. ## ... copy annotations from a class/method to the implemented class/method/field? ### Copying to the generated class If you want to copy annotations from your `@AutoValue`-annotated class to the generated `AutoValue_...` implemention, annotate your class with [`@AutoValue.CopyAnnotations`]. For example, if `Example.java` is: ```java @AutoValue @AutoValue.CopyAnnotations @SuppressWarnings("Immutable") // justification ... abstract class Example { // details ... } ``` Then `@AutoValue` will generate `AutoValue_Example.java`: ```java @SuppressWarnings("Immutable") final class AutoValue_Example extends Example { // implementation ... } ``` Applying `@AutoValue.CopyAnnotations` to an `@AutoValue.Builder` class like `Foo.Builder` similarly causes annotations on that class to be copied to the generated subclass `AutoValue_Foo.Builder`. ### Copying to the generated method For historical reasons, annotations on methods of an `@AutoValue`-annotated class are copied to the generated implementation class's methods. However, if you want to exclude some annotations from being copied, you can use [`@AutoValue.CopyAnnotations`]'s `exclude` method to stop this behavior. ### Copying to the generated field If you want to copy annotations from your `@AutoValue`-annotated class's methods to the generated fields in the `AutoValue_...` implementation, annotate your method with [`@AutoValue.CopyAnnotations`]. For example, if `Example.java` is: ```java @Immutable @AutoValue abstract class Example { @CopyAnnotations @SuppressWarnings("Immutable") // justification ... abstract Object getObject(); // other details ... } ``` Then `@AutoValue` will generate `AutoValue_Example.java`: ```java final class AutoValue_Example extends Example { @SuppressWarnings("Immutable") private final Object object; @SuppressWarnings("Immutable") @Override Object getObject() { return object; } // other details ... } ``` [`@AutoValue.CopyAnnotations`]: http://static.javadoc.io/com.google.auto.value/auto-value/1.6/com/google/auto/value/AutoValue.CopyAnnotations.html