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I am trying to load a dependency that might not be there at runtime. I have read an article about loading strategies. I have now implementation issues. My code is currently:

// Addition might not be available at runtime
try {
    Class Addition = Class.forName("com.thirdparty.Addition");
    com.thirdparty.Addition addition = (com.thirdparty.Addition)Addition.newInstance();
    int sum = addition.add(4,5);
    System.out.println("The result is: " + sum);
    } catch (Throwable ex) {
        System.out.println("Addition is not available");
}

This code snippet works when the Addition class is available. It does not work when the class is not available:

com.thirdparty.Addition cannot be resolved to a type

I have read already the javadoc on the Class.forName method but I do not really understand how to use it in the real word.

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  • I assume the error you get is a compile-time error? Nov 29, 2013 at 10:11

1 Answer 1

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you should use reflection to call the add method,like this:

try {
    Class Addition = Class.forName("com.thirdparty.Addition");
    Object addition = Addition.newInstance();
    Method addMethod = Addition.getMethod("add", int.class, int.class);
    Integer sum = (Integer)addMethod.invoke(addition, 4, 5);
    System.out.println("The result is: " + sum);
    } catch (Throwable ex) {
        ex.printStackTrace();
        System.out.println("Addition is not available");
}
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  • The better solution is to define an interface which is always available and let the optional class implement that interface. Then the extension can be instantiated via Reflection but type-cast to the interface type afterwards. So, further use of the extension can be without the Reflection overhead.
    – Holger
    Nov 29, 2013 at 11:08

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