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What is the purpose of annotations in Java? I have this fuzzy idea of them as somewhere in between a comment and actual code. Do they affect the program at run time?

What are their typical usages?

Are they unique to Java? Is there a C++ equivalent?

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    You can do some really wicked things with annotations. For example, if you know Spring Framework and their @Transactional annotation which starts a transaction before method invocation and rollbacks on exception/error and commits on successfull transaction. It totally supports the SOC-principle (seperation of concern). Very clean ! Java rules ! :-)
    – user1830397
    Nov 16, 2012 at 17:37
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    That looks like 3 questions to me. The second in itself is too broad.
    – Raedwald
    Jul 22, 2013 at 9:50
  • All annotations by syntax looks like interfaces. So, how compiler or JVM knows its purpose? Suppose if we take @ Override -> performs check on whether method overriden properly or not @ Transactional, as explained above, it performs transaction related stuff. For all these annotations, where can we found definition/logic? Mar 20, 2015 at 11:09
  • There is no such thing as an annotation, in the sense that there is no common feature of all annotations that could be used to put them in an abstract conceptual group, other than that they all start with an @ symbol. So, you need to learn every kind of annotation (@Override, @interface, user defined annotations) separately, and don't expect understanding one kind of annotation to tell you anything about the others.
    – Sean
    Apr 13, 2022 at 23:17

9 Answers 9

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Annotations are primarily used by code that is inspecting other code. They are often used for modifying (i.e. decorating or wrapping) existing classes at run-time to change their behavior. Frameworks such as JUnit and Hibernate use annotations to minimize the amount of code you need to write yourself to use the frameworks.

Oracle has a good explanation of the concept and its meaning in Java on their site.

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  • This is only true of user defined annotations, which are one specific kind of annotation; for example, @Override does something completely different.
    – Sean
    Apr 13, 2022 at 23:15
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Also, are they unique to Java, is there a C++ equivalent?

No, but VB and C# have attributes which are the same thing.

Their use is quite diverse. One typical Java example, @Override has no effect on the code but it can be used by the compiler to generate a warning (or error) if the decorated method doesn't actually override another method. Similarly, methods can be marked obsolete.

Then there's reflection. When you reflect a type of a class in your code, you can access the attributes and act according to the information found there. I don't know any examples in Java but in .NET this is used by the compiler to generate (de)serialization information for classes, determine the memory layout of structures and declare function imports from legacy libraries (among others). They also control how the IDE form designer works.

/EDIT: Attributes on classes are comparable to tag interfaces (like Serializable in Java). However, the .NET coding guidelines say not to use tag interfaces. Also, they only work on class level, not on method level.

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Anders gives a good summary, and here's an example of a JUnit annotation

@Test(expected=IOException.class)
public void flatfileMissing() throws IOException {
    readFlatFile("testfiles"+separator+"flatfile_doesnotexist.dat");
}

Here the @Test annotation is telling JUnit that the flatfileMissing method is a test that should be executed and that the expected result is a thrown IOException. Thus, when you run your tests, this method will be called and the test will pass or fail based on whether an IOException is thrown.

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Java also has the Annotation Processing Tool (apt) where not only you create annotations, but decide also how do these annotations work on the source code.

Here is an introduction.

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To see some cool stuff you can do with Annotations, check out my JavaBean annotations and annotation processor.

They're great for generating code, adding extra validations during your build, and I've also been using them for an error message framework (not yet published -- need to clear with the bosses...).

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The first thing a newcomer to annotations will ask about annotations is: "What is an annotation?" It turns out that there is no answer to this question, in the sense that there is no common behavior which is present in all of the various kinds of java annotations. There is, in other words, nothing that binds them together into an abstract conceptual group other than the fact that they all start with an "@" symbol.

For example, there is the @Override annotation, which tells the compiler to check that this member function overrides one in the parent class. There is the @Target annotation, which is used to specify what kinds of objects a user defined annotation (a third type of construct with nothing in common with other kinds of annotation) can be attached to. These have nothing to do with one another except for starting with an @ symbol.

Basically, what appears to have happened is that some committee responsible for maintaining the java language definition is gatekeeping the addition of new keywords to the java language, and therefore other developers are doing an end run around that by calling new keywords "annotations". And that's why it is hard to understand, in general what an annotation is: because there is no common feature linking all annotations that could be used to put them in a conceptual group. In other words, annotations as a concept do not exist.

Therefore I would recommend studying the behavior of every different kind of annotation individually, and do not expect understanding one kind of annotation to tell you anything about the others.

Many of the other answers to this question assume the user is asking about user defined annotations specifically, which are one kind of annotation that defines a set of integers or strings or other data, static to the class or method or variable they are attached to, that can be queried at compile time or run time. Sadly, there is no marker that distinguishes this kind of annotation from other kinds like @interface that do different things.

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By literal definition an annotation adds notes to an element. Likewise, Java annotations are tags that we insert into source code for providing more information about the code. Java annotations associate information with the annotated program element. Beside Java annotations Java programs have copious amounts of informal documentation that typically is contained within comments in the source code file. But, Java annotations are different from comments they annotate the program elements directly using annotation types to describe the form of the annotations. Java Annotations present the information in a standard and structured way so that it could be used amenably by processing tools.

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  • This is only user defined annotations; built in ones like @Override do nothing similar to this.
    – Sean
    Apr 13, 2022 at 23:10
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When do you use Java's @Override annotation and why? The link refers to a question on when one should use the override annotation(@override).. This might help understand the concept of annotation better.Check out.

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Annotations when it comes to EJB is known as choosing Implicit middle-ware approach over an explicit middle-ware approach , when you use annotation you're customizing what you exactly need from the API for example you need to call transaction method for a bank transfer : without using annotation : the code will be

transfer(Account account1, Account account2, long amount)    
{
   // 1: Call middleware API to perform a security check
   // 2: Call middleware API to start a transaction
   // 3: Call middleware API to load rows from the database
   // 4: Subtract the balance from one account, add to the other
   // 5: Call middleware API to store rows in the database
   // 6: Call middleware API to end the transaction
}

while using Annotation your code contains no cumbersome API calls to use the middle- ware services. The code is clean and focused on business logic

transfer(Account account1, Account account2, long amount) 
{
   // 1: Subtract the balance from one account, add to the other
}

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