java 反射 Reflection in Java,
java 反射 Reflection in Java,
Reflection in Java
Reflection is an API which is used to examine or modify the behavior of methods, classes, interfaces at runtime.
- The required classes for reflection are provided under java.lang.reflect package.
- Reflection gives us information about the class to which an object belongs and also the methods of that class which can be executed by using the object.
- Through reflection we can invoke methods at runtime irrespective of the access specifier used with them.
Reflection can be used to get information about –
- Class The getClass() method is used to get the name of the class to which an object belongs.
- Constructors The getConstructors() method is used to get the public constructors of the class to which an object belongs.
- Methods The getMethods() method is used to get the public methods of the class to which an objects belongs.
//
A simple Java program to demonstrate the use of reflection
import
java.lang.reflect.Method;
import
java.lang.reflect.Field;
import
java.lang.reflect.Constructor;
//
class whose object is to be created
class
Test
{
//
creating a private field
private
String s;
//
creating a public constructor
public
Test() { s = "GeeksforGeeks" ;
}
//
Creating a public method with no arguments
public
void
method1() {
System.out.println( "The
string is "
+ s);
}
//
Creating a public method with int as argument
public
void
method2( int
n) {
System.out.println( "The
number is "
+ n);
}
//
creating a private method
private
void
method3() {
System.out.println( "Private
method invoked" );
}
}
class
Demo
{
public
static
void
main(String args[]) throws
Exception
{
//
Creating object whose property is to be checked
Test
obj = new
Test();
//
Creating class object from the object using
//
getclass method
Class
cls = obj.getClass();
System.out.println( "The
name of class is "
+
cls.getName());
//
Getting the constructor of the class through the
//
object of the class
Constructor
constructor = cls.getConstructor();
System.out.println( "The
name of constructor is "
+
constructor.getName());
System.out.println( "The
public methods of class are : " );
//
Getting methods of the class through the object
//
of the class by using getMethods
Method[]
methods = cls.getMethods();
//
Printing method names
for
(Method method:methods)
System.out.println(method.getName());
//
creates object of desired method by providing the
//
method name and parameter class as arguments to
//
the getDeclaredMethod
Method
methodcall1 = cls.getDeclaredMethod( "method2" ,
int . class );
//
invokes the method at runtime
methodcall1.invoke(obj,
19 );
//
creates object of the desired field by providing
//
the name of field as argument to the
//
getDeclaredField method
Field
field = cls.getDeclaredField( "s" );
//
allows the object to access the field irrespective
//
of the access specifier used with the field
field.setAccessible( true );
//
takes object and the new value to be assigned
//
to the field as arguments
field.set(obj,
"JAVA" );
//
Creates object of desired method by providing the
//
method name as argument to the getDeclaredMethod
Method
methodcall2 = cls.getDeclaredMethod( "method1" );
//
invokes the method at runtime
methodcall2.invoke(obj);
//
Creates object of the desired method by providing
//
the name of method as argument to the
//
getDeclaredMethod method
Method
methodcall3 = cls.getDeclaredMethod( "method3" );
//
allows the object to access the method irrespective
//
of the access specifier used with the method
methodcall3.setAccessible( true );
//
invokes the method at runtime
methodcall3.invoke(obj);
}
}
|
Output :
The name of class is Test The name of constructor is Test The public methods of class are : method2 method1 wait wait wait equals toString hashCode getClass notify notifyAll The number is 19 The string is JAVA Private method invoked
Important observations :
-
We can invoke an method through reflection if we know its name and parameter types. We use below two methods for this purpose
getDeclaredMethod() : To create an object of method to be invoked. The syntax for this method isClass.getDeclaredMethod(name, parametertype) name- the name of method whose object is to be created parametertype - parameter is an array of Class objects
invoke() : To invoke a method of the class at runtime we use following method–
Method.invoke(Object, parameter) If the method of the class doesn’t accepts any parameter then null is passed as argument.
-
Through reflection we can access the private variables and methods of a class with the help of its class object and invoke the method by using the object as discussed above. We
use below two methods for this purpose.
Class.getDeclaredField(FieldName) : Used to get the private field. Returns an object of type Field for specified field name.
Field.setAccessible(true) : Allows to access the field irrespective of the access modifier used with the field.Advantages of Using Reflection:
- Extensibility Features: An application may make use of external, user-defined classes by creating instances of extensibility objects using their fully-qualified names.
- Debugging and testing tools: Debuggers use the property of reflection to examine private members on classes.
Drawbacks:
- Performance Overhead: Reflective operations have slower performance than their non-reflective counterparts, and should be avoided in sections of code which are called frequently in performance-sensitive applications.
- Exposure of Internals: Reflective code breaks abstractions and therefore may change behavior with upgrades of the platform.
Reference:
https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/reflect/index.htmlThis article is contributed by Akash Ojha.If you like GeeksforGeeks and would like to contribute, you can also write an article and mail your article to contribute@geeksforgeeks.org. See your article appearing on the GeeksforGeeks main page and help other Geeks.
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