Reputation: 9248
I have inherited a certain bit code that has the @JsonProperty annotation on getter/setters. The purpose is so that when the object is serialized using the Jackson library, the fields have that specific name.
Current code:
private String fileName;
@JsonProperty("FILENAME")
public String getFileName()
{
return fileName;
}
@JsonProperty("FILENAME")
public void setFileName(String fileName)
{
this.fileName = fileName;
}
Now for another tool, I need to annotate the field with JsonProperty as well. So this will be my changed code:
@JsonProperty("FILENAME")
private String fileName;
@JsonProperty("FILENAME")
public String getFileName()
{
return fileName;
}
@JsonProperty("FILENAME")
public void setFileName(String fileName)
{
this.fileName = fileName;
}
Has anyone used this same annotation on both - the field as well as the getter/setters? I looked around on the net but didn't see anything.
I have compiled & run the code but I'm not sure if this would this cause any problems down the road. Any thoughts on this?
Upvotes: 59
Views: 146730
Reputation: 116620
In addition to existing good answers, note that Jackson 1.9 improved handling by adding "property unification", meaning that ALL annotations from difference parts of a logical property are combined, using (hopefully) intuitive precedence.
In Jackson 1.8 and prior, only field and getter annotations were used when determining what and how to serialize (writing JSON); and only and setter annotations for deserialization (reading JSON). This sometimes required addition of "extra" annotations, like annotating both getter and setter.
With Jackson 1.9 and above these extra annotations are NOT needed. It is still possible to add those; and if different names are used, one can create "split" properties (serializing using one name, deserializing using other): this is occasionally useful for sort of renaming.
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 49935
My observations based on a few tests has been that whichever name differs from the property name is one which takes effect:
For eg. consider a slight modification of your case:
@JsonProperty("fileName")
private String fileName;
@JsonProperty("fileName")
public String getFileName()
{
return fileName;
}
@JsonProperty("fileName1")
public void setFileName(String fileName)
{
this.fileName = fileName;
}
Both fileName
field, and method getFileName
, have the correct property name of fileName
and setFileName
has a different one fileName1
, in this case Jackson will look for a fileName1
attribute in json at the point of deserialization and will create a attribute called fileName1
at the point of serialization.
Now, coming to your case, where all the three @JsonProperty differ from the default propertyname of fileName
, it would just pick one of them as the attribute(FILENAME
), and had any on of the three differed, it would have thrown an exception:
java.lang.IllegalStateException: Conflicting property name definitions
Upvotes: 56