can I define setter method to return this rather than void?

Like:

ClassA setItem1() {
      return this;
}

ClassA setItem2() {
      return this;
}

then I can use new ClassA().setItem1().setItem2()

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1  
Why would anybody want to do that? – O.D Apr 21 '11 at 8:19
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10 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

There is a lot of misunderstanding about JavaBeans spec.

The main reason for it's existence is the unified Java "component" model. It's a way to interact programatically with a Java Object using Reflection. The API itself is named JavaBeans Introspection. Please, take a look at example usages and You will know a lot more than an average Java programmer does.

Introspecion API can be used to manipulate GUI elements in an unified manner. Your component exposes it's properties as a pairs of getters and setters so that they could be discovered and manpipulated at run-time on a GUI builder's property sheet.

So, mixing fluent APIs and JavaBeans Spec in my opinion is a no-go. That's two completely unrelated concepts and can disrupt each other. JavaBeans Introspection might not work when method signature differs (return type).

Take a look at this example (taken from linked tutorial):

public class SimpleBean
{
private final String name = "SimpleBean";
private int size;

public String getName()
{
    return this.name;
}

public int getSize()
{
    return this.size;
}

public void setSize( int size )
{
    this.size = size;
}

public static void main( String[] args )
        throws IntrospectionException
{
    BeanInfo info = Introspector.getBeanInfo( SimpleBean.class );
    for ( PropertyDescriptor pd : info.getPropertyDescriptors() )
        System.out.println( pd.getName() );
}
}

This example creates a non-visual bean and displays following properties derived from the BeanInfo object:

  • class
  • name
  • size

You might want to see what happens when You change void return type to anything else. I have done so and the result is the same. So, does that mean it's allowed?

I'm afraid no. The JavaBeans spec is quite strict about those method signatures. It just happened that implementation is forgiving. Nonetheless, I'd disadvise mixing fluent interface with JavaBeans. You can't really rely that if the discovery works now it will also in future.

But, from the other side - it looks like You don't use JavaBeans to full extent. Only the getters/setters pair of method. It's up to You how You implement and design Your APIs.

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2  
Nice sample, I'm surprised this actually works with non-void setters. One thing to look out for is that not all frameworks are using the Introspector and instead implement their own logic. So you might get different results when using for example EL, jpa or jaxb. – Jörn Horstmann Apr 21 '11 at 11:29
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No reason you couldn't do that. Personally, if the setters are being used during object creation, I'd name them withItem1() and withItem2().

ClassA obj = new ClassA().withItem1(item1).withItem2(item2);

Makes it a bit clearer (to me anyway) what the intent of the methods are.

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After checking the Oracle JavaBean pages I didn't find anything which explicitly tells you that the setters need to be void. Nevertheless all examples have void set-methods.

The PropertyDescriptor in the Java API support non-void setters, so I think it should be pretty safe to let your setters return this. To be on the safe side you should probably check out if the frameworks you intend to use that uses reflection (eg. Hibernate, Spring, other web frameworks) support your setter-style.

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2  
It actually does, the Java Beans Specification, section 7.1 (Accessor Methods) shows that the setter method should be void. (oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/documentation/…) – edalorzo Apr 21 '11 at 9:12
Edalorzo is right and the section 8.3 is even more precise: "By default, we use design patterns to locate properties by looking for methods of the form: public <PropertyType> get<PropertyName>(); public void set<PropertyName>(<PropertyType> a);" – gouessej Dec 6 '11 at 12:24
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The JavaBeans Specification describes a JavaBean as:

A Java Bean is a reusable software component that can be manipulated visually in a builder tool

They are required to provide introspection, customization, events and persistence among other properties (Section 2.1: What is a bean?)

It is common to call a "Java Bean" to a Plain Old Java Object with accessor methods following the JavaBeans Specification (Section 7.1 and 8.3). The truth is that such object could still be far from being compliant with all the requirements.

If the object your are defining in this class is actually a JavaBean then your method must return void according to JavaBean Specification, section 7.1 where accessor methods are described as follows:

void setFoo(PropertyType value); // simple setter
PropertyType getFoo(); // simple getter

The section 8.3 named designed patterns for properties says:

By default, we use design patterns to locate properties by looking for methods of the form:

public <PropertyType> get<PropertyName>();
public void set<PropertyName>(<PropertyType> a);

In addition, for boolean properties, we allow a getter method to match the pattern:

public boolean is<PropertyName>();

However, if your class is just a POJO then there is nothing wrong with using your method chaining strategy because you are allowed to deviate from the specification since you are not actually building a JavaBean. Not all the classes you define are supposed to be JavaBeans after all, right?

Your might like to take a look at the Oracle JavaBeans Tutorial.

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+1: The best explanation for the question – Rekin Apr 21 '11 at 10:26
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I would guess this is not in violation of the JavaBean specification, although I am not sure of it.

Check out the following example:

public class JavaBean {

    private String value;

    public String getValue() {
        return value;
    }

    public JavaBean setValue(String value) {
        this.value = value;
        return this;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        JavaBean bean = new JavaBean();
        JavaBean.class.getMethod("setValue", String.class).invoke(bean, "test");
        System.out.println(bean.getValue());
    }
}

Many frameworks access JavaBeans using the reflection API. As you can see above, accessing a settter which returns 'this' is not influenced by the return type (the return type is not used to locate a method via reflection). It also makes sense, because you cannot have two methods in one scope that are identical except for their return type.

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Since the JavaBean spec requires a setter method to be of the form public void setPropertyName(PropertyType value), you cannot have a return type other than void.

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Although all setters are shown as 'void' in the JavaBean spec, I could not find this as an explicit requirement anywhere. Do you have a link/reference that actually states it is not allowed? – Adriaan Koster Apr 21 '11 at 10:45
@Adriaan:From the spec, section 8.3.1: "By default, we use design patterns to locate properties by looking for methods of the form: public <PropertyType> get<PropertyName>(); public void set<PropertyName>(<PropertyType> a);" Although it doesn't explicitly disallow non-void return types, the above wording looks like a requirement. – Hippo Apr 21 '11 at 11:06
Yes, I saw that part of the spec, but don't find it very conclusive. See the answer I just submitted, which argues that it might not be a requirement. – Adriaan Koster Apr 21 '11 at 11:08
@Adriaan: +1 for your answer, as it illustrates why this may not be really needed. Sticking to the spec should be safer though, as @Rekin explains in the answer above. – Hippo Apr 21 '11 at 11:27
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Absolutely nothing to stop you doing that but why. If you want to do this create a constructor that takes the args. Bare in mind some software that uses beans would not be expecting return values and may have some unexpected results

If you just want to simplify initialisation, (maybe to set up tests) you could use some groovy code.

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Yes. This is a somewhat common technique called Method Chaining, and can be used to create a "fluent interface".

See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Method_chaining, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluent_interface

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I'm personally not comfortable calling this usage of method chaining as an instance of the Fluent Interface pattern, IMHO a bunch of setters chained together is not fluent, it would look too cluttered. – vickirk Apr 21 '11 at 8:32
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There is nothing preventing you from providing setter methods which return the target object as a convention in your interface...

However, you must also use the canonical signature for Java Bean Simple Property setter methods (e.g. void setProp(Type t)) or the bean property will not be recognized as writeable by other software which expects that signature.

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Are You sure You can have tho methods with same name and argument list, but different return types? AFAIK this imposes ambiguity and thus is forbidden – Rekin Apr 21 '11 at 9:05
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Just to add that for people using Spring 3.1+ this is not an issue anymore

see http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.1.0.M2/spring-framework-reference/html/new-in-3.1.html

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