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How can I create an instance of the following annotation (with all fields set to their default value).

    @Retention( RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME )
    public @interface Settings {
            String a() default "AAA";
            String b() default "BBB";
            String c() default "CCC";
    }

I tried new Settings(), but that does not seem to work...

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3 Answers

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You cannot create an instance, but at least get the default values

Settings.class.getMethod("a").getDefaultValue()
Settings.class.getMethod("b").getDefaultValue()
Settings.class.getMethod("c").getDefaultValue()

And then, a dynamic proxy could be used to return the default values. Which is, as far as I can tell, the way annotations are handled by Java itself also.

class Defaults implements InvocationHandler {
  public static <A extends Annotation> A of(Class<A> annotation) {
    return (A) Proxy.newProxyInstance(annotation.getClassLoader(),
        new Class[] {annotation}, new Defaults());
  }
  public Object invoke(Object proxy, Method method, Object[] args)
      throws Throwable {
    return method.getDefaultValue();
  }
}

Settings s = Defaults.of(Settings.class);
System.out.printf("%s\n%s\n%s\n", s.a(), s.b(), s.c());
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Not having my Java-environment Eclipse running, have you tried just "@Settings", without the parentheses?

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if used with a method:

@Settings public void myMethod() { }

Now your annotation is initialized with default values.

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Best workaround sofar. Still looking for a cleaner solution. – Adrian Nov 10 '08 at 9:53

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