Reputation: 1371
It is difficult to find any clues for the topic. All I could find is questions about converting one functional interface to another and some articles on type casting in Java. Not what I was looking for.
This question is about converting lambda → Method
and I want the opposite, to convert Method
to any functional interface, for example, to Consumer
.
The way I found is to create a lambda adapter around the Method#invoke
method:
public void registerCallbacks(final Object annotated) {
Class clazz = annotated.getClass();
for (Method method : clazz.getDeclaredMethods()) {
if (method.isAnnotationPresent(Callback.class)) {
Callback registration = method.getAnnotation(Callback.class);
List<String> warnings = new ArrayList<>(3);
if (!Modifier.isPublic(method.getModifiers()))
warnings.add(String.format("Method %s must be public", method));
if (method.getParameterCount() != 1)
warnings.add(String.format("Method %s must consume only one argument", method));
if (method.getParameterCount() == 1 && !method.getParameterTypes()[0].equals(Integer.class))
warnings.add(String.format("Method %s must consume %s", method, Integer.class));
if (!warnings.isEmpty()) {
warnings.forEach(log::warn);
continue;
}
CALLBACKS_MAPPER.registerCallback((param) -> {
try {
method.invoke(annotated, param);
} catch (IllegalAccessException | InvocationTargetException e) {
// Should not happen due to checks before.
log.warn(String.format("Could not invoke %s on %s with %s", method, annotated, param), e);
}
});
log.info("Registered {} as a callback", method);
}
}
}
However I want to avoid writing
CALLBACKS_MAPPER.registerCallback((param) -> {
try {
method.invoke(annotated, param);
} catch (IllegalAccessException | InvocationTargetException e) {
// Should not happen due to checks before.
log.warn(String.format("Could not invoke %s on %s with %s", method, annotated, param), e);
}
});
in favor of something simpler, like
CALLBACKS_MAPPER.registerCallback(SomeApacheLib.methodToFunction(annotated, method));
➥ So, is there a way to map old Java 1.1 reflection library to newer Java 8 functional interfaces, or it is me being stupid and the abovementioned solution with lambda is fine as it is?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 2719
Reputation: 15429
If you're content with using reflection under the hood, just don't like the try
/catch
around the invoke
, you can just make a simple utility function like:
public static <T> Consumer<T> toConsumer(Object annotated, Method m) {
return param -> {
try {
m.invoke(annotated, param);
} catch (IllegalAccessException | InvocationTargetException e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
};
}
And that gives you exactly the syntax you wanted:
CALLBACKS_MAPPER.registerCallback(toConsumer(annotated, method));
But if you want to actually avoid reflection altogether, you can use LambdaMetafactory
to create a Consumer
:
static Consumer<String> toConsumer(MethodHandles.Lookup lookup, Object annotated, Method method) throws Throwable {
MethodType consumeString = MethodType.methodType(void.class, String.class);
MethodHandle handle = lookup.unreflect(method);
final CallSite site = LambdaMetafactory.metafactory(lookup, "accept",
MethodType.methodType(Consumer.class, annotated.getClass()),
consumeString.changeParameterType(0, Object.class),
handle,
consumeString);
return (Consumer<String>) site.getTarget().invoke(annotated);
}
Change String
to whatever your callbacks are expected to accept. And then:
CALLBACKS_MAPPER.registerCallback(toConsumer(MethodHandles.lookup(), annotated, method));
Of course, the only proper solution here is that you refactor your code to use a known callback interface on which you can normally call a defined method, instead of passing Method
s around.
Upvotes: 9