/* * Copyright (C) 2008 Google Inc. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson; /** * A strategy (or policy) definition that is used to decide whether or not a * field or top-level class should be serialized or deserialized as part of the * JSON output/input. For serialization, if the {@link #shouldSkipClass(Class)} * method returns true then that class or field type will not be part of the * JSON output. For deserialization, if {@link #shouldSkipClass(Class)} returns * true, then it will not be set as part of the Java object structure. * *

* The following are a few examples that shows how you can use this exclusion * mechanism. * *

* Exclude fields and objects based on a particular class type: * *

 * private static class SpecificClassExclusionStrategy implements ExclusionStrategy {
 * 	private final Class<?> excludedThisClass;
 *
 * 	public SpecificClassExclusionStrategy(Class<?> excludedThisClass) {
 * 		this.excludedThisClass = excludedThisClass;
 * 	}
 *
 * 	public boolean shouldSkipClass(Class<?> clazz) {
 * 		return excludedThisClass.equals(clazz);
 * 	}
 *
 * 	public boolean shouldSkipField(FieldAttributes f) {
 * 		return excludedThisClass.equals(f.getDeclaredClass());
 * 	}
 * }
 * 
* *

* Excludes fields and objects based on a particular * annotation: * *

 * public @interface FooAnnotation {
 *   // some implementation here
 * }
 *
 * // Excludes any field (or class) that is tagged with an "@FooAnnotation"
 * private static class FooAnnotationExclusionStrategy implements ExclusionStrategy {
 *   public boolean shouldSkipClass(Class<?> clazz) {
 *     return clazz.getAnnotation(FooAnnotation.class) != null;
 *   }
 *
 *   public boolean shouldSkipField(FieldAttributes f) {
 *     return f.getAnnotation(FooAnnotation.class) != null;
 *   }
 * }
 * 
* *

* Now if you want to configure {@code Gson} to use a user defined exclusion * strategy, then the {@code GsonBuilder} is required. The following is an * example of how you can use the {@code GsonBuilder} to configure Gson to use * one of the above sample: * *

 * ExclusionStrategy excludeStrings = new UserDefinedExclusionStrategy(String.class);
 * Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().setExclusionStrategies(excludeStrings).create();
 * 
* *

* For certain model classes, you may only want to serialize a field, but * exclude it for deserialization. To do that, you can write an * {@code ExclusionStrategy} as per normal; however, you would register it with * the * {@link GsonBuilder#addDeserializationExclusionStrategy(ExclusionStrategy)} * method. For example: * *

 * ExclusionStrategy excludeStrings = new UserDefinedExclusionStrategy(String.class);
 * Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().addDeserializationExclusionStrategy(excludeStrings).create();
 * 
* * @author Inderjeet Singh * @author Joel Leitch * * @see GsonBuilder#setExclusionStrategies(ExclusionStrategy...) * @see GsonBuilder#addDeserializationExclusionStrategy(ExclusionStrategy) * @see GsonBuilder#addSerializationExclusionStrategy(ExclusionStrategy) * * @since 1.4 */ public interface ExclusionStrategy { /** * @param f * the field object that is under test * @return true if the field should be ignored; otherwise false */ public boolean shouldSkipField(FieldAttributes f); /** * @param clazz * the class object that is under test * @return true if the class should be ignored; otherwise false */ public boolean shouldSkipClass(Class clazz); }