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Do classes annotated with @Singleton have to follow the Singleton design pattern?

My guess is that they do not: it is not necessary to have a private constructor, and a static .instance() method, but instead it is Guice that makes sure that only one instance of the class will be instantiated.

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  • Yes, it is equivalent to StaticObject.getInstance() or public final static Object singleton. So, you make sure it is thread safe in multithread application. Anyway what\s the question? Jul 17, 2015 at 8:22
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    <Milan>: My question is whether singletons in Guice (can/should/should not at all) use the design pattern for singletons that has been described in many other places. <durron597> answering that not only does Guice make the class not need to do things like have a private constructor, etc. but it should not be designed that way. That answer was very clarifying -- it was not obvious at all that Guice would affect the design of the class.
    – Jeff
    Jul 18, 2015 at 5:31

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Not only are they not required to follow the Singleton pattern, they explicitly should not follow it.

A system that is properly set up with Guice should be creating as few of its own objects as possible, instead letting the framework do all of the object creation. Further, you do not want random classes in your system to be calling .instance() on this static instance, and, finally, you do not want Guice to be creating a static reference in the Singleton class using .requestStaticInjection().

The right thing to do with your @Singleton classes is to just have them be injected into the classes that need that particular dependency.

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The difference between a singleton in Guice and the regular singleton has to do with context.

When you're not using Guice you have to manage your singleton yourself. To ensure that there is only ever one instance created you have a private constructor, a static field and methods to access this instance (either a getter or making the field final). This means that the instance is a singleton in the context of the class loader. If you create another class loader and tell it to load your singleton class you can create a second instance.

When the singleton is managed by Guice we replace the private constructor and static field with the @Singleton annotation, telling the injector that it should only ever create one instance of this class and use it anywhere it is requested. Since it is possible to have more than one injector simultaneously (either because you need two completely different contexts or because you're using child injectors) you must not prevent Guice from instantiating more than one instance of your class.

Additionally, since you should rely on Guice to provide the singleton everywhere it is required there is no need for a static field containing the singleton instance since it should never be accessed.

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