5

Is it possible to get the class type from inside the static initialization block?

This is a simplified version of what I currently have::

class Person extends SuperClass {

   String firstName;

   static{
      // This function is on the "SuperClass":
      //  I'd for this function to be able to get "Person.class" without me
      //  having to explicitly type it in but "this.class" does not work in 
      //  a static context.
      doSomeReflectionStuff(Person.class);     // IN "SuperClass"
   }
}

This is closer to what I am doing, which is to initialize a data structure that holds information about the object and its annotations, etc... Perhaps I am using the wrong pattern?

public abstract SuperClass{
   static void doSomeReflectionStuff( Class<?> classType, List<FieldData> fieldDataList ){
      Field[] fields = classType.getDeclaredFields();
      for( Field field : fields ){
         // Initialize fieldDataList
      }
   }
}

public abstract class Person {

   @SomeAnnotation
   String firstName;

   // Holds information on each of the fields, I used a Map<String, FieldData>
   //  in my actual implementation to map strings to the field information, but that
   //  seemed a little wordy for this example
   static List<FieldData> fieldDataList = new List<FieldData>();

   static{
      // Again, it seems dangerous to have to type in the "Person.class"
      //   (or Address.class, PhoneNumber.class, etc...) every time.
      //   Ideally, I'd liken to eliminate all this code from the Sub class
      //   since now I have to copy and paste it into each Sub class.
      doSomeReflectionStuff(Person.class, fieldDataList);
   }
}

Edit

I picked the accepted answer based on what applied best to my problem, however it seems to me that all three of the current answers have their merits.

3 Answers 3

1

No, it's not possible without grabbing the stacktrace (which is imo nastier than your initial approach and for which I would in any way prefer Thread#getStackTrace() above new Exception()).

Rather do that job in a non-static initializer (or the default constructor) of the abstract class where you check the initialized status.

public abstract class SuperClass {

    {
        if (!isInitialized(getClass())) {
            initialize(getClass());
        }
    }

}

The called methods in turn can be safely static.

2
  • Thanks for your answer, thats definitely a lot cleaner than what I have. What would you say to the efficiency argument that "isInitialized(getClass())" would be called every time an instance of the object is created? May 31, 2010 at 17:38
  • It's at least cheaper than initializing it again and again everytime. If you store it as a HashMap key and use fieldDataMap.containsKey(getClass()), then the cost is very little.
    – BalusC
    May 31, 2010 at 17:51
1

yes, I use this often to initialize a static Log variable :

e.g. :

public class Project implements Serializable, Cloneable, Comparable<Project> {
    private static final Logger LOG = LoggerFactory.getLogger(Project.class);
    ...
1

To get a class at runtime, you could do something along the lines of

public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
    try{
        throw new Exception();
    }
    catch(Exception e){
        StackTraceElement[] sTrace = e.getStackTrace();
        // sTrace[0] will be always there
        String className = sTrace[0].getClassName();
        System.out.println(className);

    }
}

}

Not pretty but will do the job (ripped from http://www.artima.com/forums/flat.jsp?forum=1&thread=155230).

This means you still make a call from the subclass (so is in the stack trace), but you don't need to include the XXX.class as an argument.

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