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package javax.management;

import java.lang.annotation.*;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.*;
import static java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy.*;

An annotation on a constructor that shows how the parameters of that constructor correspond to the constructed object's getter methods. For example:

        public class MemoryUsage {
            // standard JavaBean conventions with getters
            @ConstructorParameters({"init", "used", "committed", "max"})
            public MemoryUsage(long init, long used,
                               long committed, long max) {...}
            public long getInit() {...}
            public long getUsed() {...}
            public long getCommitted() {...}
            public long getMax() {...}
        }
    

The annotation shows that the first parameter of the constructor can be retrieved with the getInit() method, the second one with the getUsed() method, and so on. Since parameter names are not in general available at runtime, without the annotation there would be no way of knowing which parameter corresponds to which property.

If a constructor is annotated by the both @java.beans.ConstructorProperties and @javax.management.ConstructorParameters annotations the JMX introspection will give an absolute precedence to the latter one.

Since:9
/** * <p> * An annotation on a constructor that shows how the parameters of * that constructor correspond to the constructed object's getter * methods. For example: * </p> * <blockquote> * <pre> * public class MemoryUsage { * // standard JavaBean conventions with getters * <b>@ConstructorParameters({"init", "used", "committed", "max"})</b> * public MemoryUsage(long init, long used, * long committed, long max) {...} * public long getInit() {...} * public long getUsed() {...} * public long getCommitted() {...} * public long getMax() {...} * } * </pre> * </blockquote> * <p> * The annotation shows that the first parameter of the constructor * can be retrieved with the {@code getInit()} method, the second one with * the {@code getUsed()} method, and so on. Since parameter names are not in * general available at runtime, without the annotation there would be * no way of knowing which parameter corresponds to which property. * </p> * <p> * If a constructor is annotated by the both {@code @java.beans.ConstructorProperties} * and {@code @javax.management.ConstructorParameters} annotations * the JMX introspection will give an absolute precedence to the latter one. * </p> * * @since 9 */
@Documented @Target(CONSTRUCTOR) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface ConstructorParameters {

The getter names.

Returns:the getter names corresponding to the parameters in the annotated constructor.
/** * <p>The getter names.</p> * * @return the getter names corresponding to the parameters in the * annotated constructor. */
String[] value(); }