I implemented lee's suggestion, there is no need of third party libraries to achieve that, the following example prints the names of the methods (tested with Java 17 but should work with Java 1.6 with minor changes):
import com.sun.source.util.JavacTask;
import com.sun.source.tree.CompilationUnitTree;
import com.sun.source.tree.ClassTree;
import com.sun.source.tree.MethodTree;
import com.sun.source.tree.Tree;
import java.io.File;
import java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.stream.Collectors;
import javax.tools.JavaCompiler;
import javax.tools.JavaFileObject;
import javax.tools.StandardJavaFileManager;
import javax.tools.ToolProvider;
public class Main {
public static void main(final String[] args) throws Exception {
final JavaCompiler compiler = ToolProvider.getSystemJavaCompiler();
try (final StandardJavaFileManager fileManager = compiler.getStandardFileManager(null, null, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)) {
final Iterable<? extends JavaFileObject> compilationUnits = fileManager.getJavaFileObjectsFromFiles(Arrays.asList(new File(args[0])));
final JavacTask javacTask = (JavacTask) compiler.getTask(null, fileManager, null, null, null, compilationUnits);
final Iterable<? extends CompilationUnitTree> compilationUnitTrees = javacTask.parse();
final ClassTree classTree = (ClassTree) compilationUnitTrees.iterator().next().getTypeDecls().get(0);
final List<? extends Tree> classMemberList = classTree.getMembers();
final List<MethodTree> classMethodMemberList = classMemberList.stream()
.filter(MethodTree.class::isInstance)
.map(MethodTree.class::cast)
.collect(Collectors.toList());
// just prints the names of the methods
classMethodMemberList.stream().map(MethodTree::getName)
.forEachOrdered(System.out::println);
}
}
}
Note that other solutions except ANTLR don't support very latest versions of Java, javaparser doesn't fully support 19 currently (January 2023), JavaCC doesn't seem to support Java >= 9 according to its public documentation.
Federico Tomassetti wrote in 2016 that there was no parsing functionality as part of the JDK, I replied that he was wrong. I have nothing against third party libraries but providing false information to developers in order to promote her/his stuff is not honest and is not the kind of behavior I expect on StackOverflow. I use some classes and APIs available in Java since Java 1.6 released in December 2006.