Functions for recursively converting Java beans to Clojure and vice versa. Future home of Java beans and properties support from the old clojure-contrib
This project follows the version scheme MAJOR.MINOR.COMMITS where MAJOR and MINOR provide some relative indication of the size of the change, but do not follow semantic versioning. In general, all changes endeavor to be non-breaking (by moving to new names rather than by breaking existing names). COMMITS is an ever-increasing counter of commits since the beginning of this repository.
Latest stable release: 1.0.73
[org.clojure/java.data "1.0.73"]
<dependency>
<groupId>org.clojure</groupId>
<artifactId>java.data</artifactId>
<version>1.0.73</version>
</dependency>
(require '[clojure.java.data :as j])
;; construct YourJavaClass instance from Clojure data structure
;; (usually a Clojure hash map of properties to set on the instance):
(j/to-java YourJavaClass clojure-property-map)
;; the 0-arity constructor is called to construct the instance
;; and then the properties are added by calling setters
;; note that keys in the property map must follow the :camelCase
;; naming of the Java fields to which they correspond, so that
;; the appropriate setter methods can be invoked, e.g.,
(j/to-java SomeJavaClass {:stuff 42 :moreStuff "13"})
;; this is equivalent to:
(let [obj (SomeJavaClass.)]
(.setStuff obj 42)
(.setMoreStuff obj "13"))
;; represent a javaValue instance in a Clojure data structure:
(j/from-java javaValue)
;; populate javaValue instance from a Clojure property hash map
;; (calls a setter for each key/value pair in the hash map):
(j/set-properties javaValue clojure-property-map)
;; provide constructor arguments via metadata:
(j/to-java YourJavaClass
(with-meta clojure-property-map
{::j/constructor ["constructor" "arguments"]}))
;; constructor arguments must match the parameter types
;; so you may need type hints and coercions on them
Representing an instance of YourJavaClass
in a Clojure data structure
(defmethod j/from-java YourJavaClass [instance]
; your custom logic for turning this instance into a clojure data structure
)
Constructing an instance of YourJavaClass
from a Clojure data structure
(defmethod j/to-java [YourJavaClass clojure.lang.APersistentMap] [clazz props]
; your custom logic for constructing an instance from a property map
)
As of 0.2.0, java.data
adds a new namespace and a new to-java
function that supports the Builder Pattern. Instead of just creating an instance
of the specified class and then setting properties on it, this variant works
with an associated "builder" class (or instance), setting properties on it,
and then producing an instance of the specified class from it.
In Java, that typically looks like:
MyClass foo = new MyClass.Builder()
.fooBar( 42 )
.quux( "stuff" )
.build();
That becomes:
(require '[clojure.java.data.builder :as builder])
(def foo (builder/to-java MyClass {:fooBar 42 :quux "stuff"}))
By default, this assumes MyClass
has a nested class called Builder
, and the
property methods could be .fooBar
, .setFooBar
, or .withFooBar
(and
.quux
, .setQuux
, or .withQuux
), and then a .build
method
that produces the MyClass
object.
You can also specify an options hash map containing any of the following:
:builder-class
-- the class that should be used for the builder process; by default it will assume an inner class of clazz
called Builder
,:builder-props
-- properties used to construct and initialize an instance of the builder class; defaults to an empty hash map; may have :clojure.java.data/constructor
as metadata to provide constructor arguments for the builder instance,:build-fn
-- the name of the method in the Builder
class to use to complete the builder process and return the desired class; by default it will try to deduce it, preferring build
if we find multiple candidates,:ignore-setters?
-- a flag to indicate that methods on the builder class that begin with set
should be ignored, which may be necessary to avoid ambiguous methods that look like builder properties; by default setFooBar
and withQuuxIt
will be treated as builder properties fooBar
and quuxIt
if they accept a single argument and return a builder instance.Additional arities allow you to specify a builder instance, for cases where the builder is not simply constructed from a (nested) class, and both a builder class and a builder instance for more complex cases:
;; requires the options hash map, even if it is empty:
(builder/to-java MyClass (MyClass/builder) {:bar 42 :quux "stuff"} {})
;; for cases where the type of the builder instance differs from the actual
;; builder class that should be used for property method return types:
(builder/to-java MyClass MyClassBuilder (MyClass/builder) {:bar 42 :quux "stuff"} {})
clojure.core/bean
Clojure core provides a bean
function which has some overlap with java.data. Below is a more detailed comparison:
Dimension | bean
| java.data
-- | ------ | -----------
find fields | bean introspector | bean introspector - "class"
depth | 1 | recursive without cycle detection
field names | keyword | keyword
extensibility | none | multimethod on class
special casing | none | arrays, iterable, maps, enums, Instant, SQLException, XMLGregorianCalendar
map keys | unhandled | untouched
exception defense | none | none
Copyright (c) Rich Hickey and contributors. All rights reserved.
The use and distribution terms for this software are covered by the Eclipse Public License 1.0 which can be found in the file epl.html at the root of this distribution. By using this software in any fashion, you are agreeing to be bound by the terms of this license. You must not remove this notice, or any other, from this software.
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