This is the way to create an instance using a class name. The concrete type of Alert
must have a public constructor that takes no arguments.
private Alert alert;
public void setAlert(String className)
{
try {
Class<?> raw = Class.forName(className);
Class<? extends Alert> type = raw.asSubclass(Alert.class);
Constructor<? extends Alert> ctor = type.getConstructor();
this.alert = ctor.newInstance();
} catch (Exception ex) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid Alert implementation.", ex);
}
}
The caller would use it like this:
AlertController aController = new AlertController();
controller.setAlert("com.y.foo.RedAlert");
If you create a convention for passing a certain set of parameters to the constructor, you can do that too, but you'll need to do a little extra work in the getConstructor()
call to find it. You can also use constructors that aren't public, but, again, that takes a bit of extra work.
The suggestions to pass the class literal, RedAlert.class
, don't make much sense. If the RedAlert
class is available to the caller at compile time, you'd just use its constructor, new RedAlert()
.
SetAlert(new RedAlert())
?