The only place this is done is in the enum classes which extend Enum. It uses a language twist, and something like class ClassA<T extends ClassA>
. Either you do:
public class ClassA {
private static final Map<Class<? extends ClassA>, ClassA> singletons = new HashMap<>();
public static <T extends ClassA> T get(Class<T> klazz) {
T singleton = klazz.cast(singletons.get(klazz));
if (singleton == null) {
try {
singleton = klazz.getConstructor().newInstance();
} catch (InstantiationException | IllegalAccessException
| IllegalArgumentException | InvocationTargetException
| NoSuchMethodException | SecurityException e) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(e);
}
singletons.put(klazz, singleton);
}
return singleton;
}
protected ClassA() { }
}
Or you rethink your desire of plural singletons, and either do a general container lookup, (maybe with declarative XML or annotations) or a bean container. EJB 3.1 is very nice and simple.