JavaTM 2 Platform Std. Ed. v1.6.0
javax.xml.bind.annotation
Annotation Type XmlAnyElement
@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Target(value={FIELD,METHOD})
public @interface XmlAnyElement
Maps a JavaBean property to XML infoset representation and/or JAXB element.
This annotation serves as a "catch-all" property while unmarshalling
xml content into a instance of a JAXB annotated class. It typically
annotates a multi-valued JavaBean property, but it can occur on
single value JavaBean property. During unmarshalling, each xml element
that does not match a static @XmlElement or @XmlElementRef
annotation for the other JavaBean properties on the class, is added to this
"catch-all" property.
Usages:
@XmlAnyElement
public Element [] others;
// Collection of Element or JAXB elements.
@XmlAnyElement(lax="true")
public Object [] others;
@XmlAnyElement
private List<Element > nodes;
@XmlAnyElement
private Element node;
Restriction usage constraints
This annotation is mutually exclusive with
XmlElement , XmlAttribute , XmlValue ,
XmlElements , XmlID , and XmlIDREF .
There can be only one XmlAnyElement annotated JavaBean property
in a class and its super classes.
Relationship to other annotations
This annotation can be used with XmlJavaTypeAdapter , so that users
can map their own data structure to DOM, which in turn can be composed
into XML.
This annotation can be used with XmlMixed like this:
// List of java.lang.String or DOM nodes.
@XmlAnyElement @XmlMixed
List<Object> others;
Schema To Java example
The following schema would produce the following Java class:
class Foo {
int a;
int b;
@XmlAnyElement
List<Element> any;
}
It can unmarshal instances like
1
// this will be bound to DOM, because unmarshalling is orderless
3
5 // this will be bound to DOM, because the annotation doesn't remember namespaces.
The following schema would produce the following Java class:
class Bar extends Foo {
int c;
// Foo.getAny() also represents wildcard content for type definition bar.
}
It can unmarshal instances like
1
// this will be bound to DOM, because unmarshalling is orderless
3
5 // this now goes to Bar.c
// this will go to Foo.any
The XmlAnyElement annotation can be used with XmlElementRef s to
designate additional elements that can participate in the content tree.
The following schema would produce the following Java class:
class Foo {
@XmlAnyElement (lax="true")
@XmlElementRefs ({
@XmlElementRef (name="a", type="JAXBElement.class")
@XmlElementRef (name="b", type="JAXBElement.class")
})
List <Object > others;
}
@XmlRegistry
class ObjectFactory {
...
@XmlElementDecl(name = "a", namespace = "", scope = Foo.class)
JAXBElement <Integer> createFooA( Integer i ) { ... }
@XmlElementDecl(name = "b", namespace = "", scope = Foo.class)
JAXBElement <Integer> createFooB( Integer i ) { ... }
It can unmarshal instances like
1 // this will unmarshal to a JAXBElement instance whose value is 1.
// this will unmarshal to a DOM Element .
3 // this will unmarshal to a JAXBElement instance whose value is 1.
W3C XML Schema "lax" wildcard emulation
The lax element of the annotation enables the emulation of the "lax" wildcard semantics.
For example, when the Java source code is annotated like this:
@XmlRootElement
class Foo {
@XmlAnyElement(lax=true)
public Object [] others;
}
then the following document will unmarshal like this:
Foo foo = unmarshal();
// 1 for 'unknown', another for 'foo'
assert foo.others.length==2;
// 'unknown' unmarshals to a DOM element
assert foo.others[0] instanceof Element;
// because of lax=true, the 'foo' element eagerly
// unmarshals to a Foo object.
assert foo.others[1] instanceof Foo;
- Since:
- JAXB2.0
Optional Element Summary |
boolean |
lax
Controls the unmarshaller behavior when it sees elements
known to the current JAXBContext . |
Class<? extends DomHandler> |
value
Specifies the DomHandler which is responsible for actually
converting XML from/to a DOM-like data structure. |
lax
public abstract boolean lax
- Controls the unmarshaller behavior when it sees elements
known to the current
JAXBContext .
When false
If false, all the elements that match the property will be unmarshalled
to DOM, and the property will only contain DOM elements.
When true
If true, when an element matches a property marked with XmlAnyElement
is known to JAXBContext (for example, there's a class with
XmlRootElement that has the same tag name, or there's
XmlElementDecl that has the same tag name),
the unmarshaller will eagerly unmarshal this element to the JAXB object,
instead of unmarshalling it to DOM. Additionally, if the element is
unknown but it has a known xsi:type, the unmarshaller eagerly unmarshals
the element to a JAXBElement , with the unknown element name and
the JAXBElement value is set to an instance of the JAXB mapping of the
known xsi:type.
As a result, after the unmarshalling, the property can become heterogeneous;
it can have both DOM nodes and some JAXB objects at the same time.
This can be used to emulate the "lax" wildcard semantics of the W3C XML Schema.
- Default:
- false
value
public abstract Class<? extends DomHandler> value
- Specifies the
DomHandler which is responsible for actually
converting XML from/to a DOM-like data structure.
- Default:
- javax.xml.bind.annotation.W3CDomHandler.class
Copyright 2003 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved
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