I am not clear with the class java.lang.Void
in Java. Can anybody elaborate in this with an example.
4 Answers
It also contains Void.TYPE
, useful for testing return type with reflection:
public void foo() {}
...
if (getClass().getMethod("foo").getReturnType() == Void.TYPE) ...
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+1 for pointing that it is used in reflection to specify the type of a method, which has no return value.– stackerFeb 28, 2010 at 21:09
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1Actually there is also void.class (lowercase!) which would also works perfectly in your example. So Void is not needed there. Feb 28, 2010 at 23:27
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8In fact, Void.TYPE is defined as public static final Class<Void> TYPE = Class.getPrimitiveClass("void"); Which itself is void.class. Feb 28, 2010 at 23:29
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1
Say you want to have a generic that returns void for something:
abstract class Foo<T>
{
abstract T bar();
}
class Bar
extends Foo<Void>
{
Void bar()
{
return (null);
}
}
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14
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3I like TofuBeer's answer, but Roman raised an interesting point there. Feb 28, 2010 at 23:30
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1It isn't there strictly for that, it was just the first use that jumped to mind. The reflection answer is why it was introduced.– TofuBeerMar 1, 2010 at 0:39
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4Had this use case and was stumped when javac wrote
This method must return a result of type Void
. Just returning(null)
didn't come to mind.– oschrenkMay 21, 2012 at 15:26
Actually there is a pragmatic case where void.class is really useful. Suppose you need to create an annotation for class fields, and you need to define the class of the field to get some information about it (in example, if the field is an enum, to get list of potential values). In that case, you would need something like this:
@Target(ElementType.FIELD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface PropertyResourceMapper
{
public Class acceptedValues() default void.class;
}
to be used like this:
@PropertyResourceMapper(acceptedValues = ImageFormat.class, description = "The format of the image (en example, jpg).")
private ImageFormat format;
I have used this to create a custom serializer of classes to a proprietary format.
From the Java docs:
public final class Void
extends Object
The Void class is an uninstantiable placeholder class to hold a reference to the Class object representing the Java keyword void.
static Class<Void> TYPE
The Class object representing the primitive Java type void.
TYPE
public static final Class<Void> TYPE
The Class object representing the primitive Java type void.
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9This is just a copy+paste of the documentation, not a real answer. Sep 15, 2011 at 16:36
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1@Hugo That is true, but I still found this to be the most useful answer. Other answers sidestep why it exists. It is the Class representation of a primitive type. Like Integer or Double. Oct 22, 2013 at 7:29
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1You should also mention that the only term that inhabits Void is null.– Prof MoFeb 22, 2014 at 16:11