Class FactoryProvider<F>

  • Type Parameters:
    F - The factory interface
    All Implemented Interfaces:
    Provider<F>, HasDependencies, jakarta.inject.Provider<F>

    @Deprecated
    public class FactoryProvider<F>
    extends Object
    implements Provider<F>, HasDependencies
    Deprecated.
    Obsolete. Prefer FactoryModuleBuilder for its more concise API and additional capability.

    Provides a factory that combines the caller's arguments with injector-supplied values to construct objects.

    Defining a factory

    Create an interface whose methods return the constructed type, or any of its supertypes. The method's parameters are the arguments required to build the constructed type.
    public interface PaymentFactory {
       Payment create(Date startDate, Money amount);
     }
    You can name your factory methods whatever you like, such as create, createPayment or newPayment.

    Creating a type that accepts factory parameters

    constructedType is a concrete class with an @Inject-annotated constructor. In addition to injector-supplied parameters, the constructor should have parameters that match each of the factory method's parameters. Each factory-supplied parameter requires an @Assisted annotation. This serves to document that the parameter is not bound by your application's modules.
    public class RealPayment implements Payment {
       @Inject
       public RealPayment(
          CreditService creditService,
          AuthService authService,
          @Assisted Date startDate,
          @Assisted Money amount) {
         ...
       }
     }
    Any parameter that permits a null value should also be annotated @Nullable.

    Configuring factories

    In your module, bind the factory interface to the returned factory:
    bind(PaymentFactory.class).toProvider(
         FactoryProvider.newFactory(PaymentFactory.class, RealPayment.class));
    As a side-effect of this binding, Guice will inject the factory to initialize it for use. The factory cannot be used until the injector has been initialized.

    Using the factory

    Inject your factory into your application classes. When you use the factory, your arguments will be combined with values from the injector to construct an instance.
    public class PaymentAction {
       @Inject private PaymentFactory paymentFactory;
    
       public void doPayment(Money amount) {
         Payment payment = paymentFactory.create(new Date(), amount);
         payment.apply();
       }
     }

    Making parameter types distinct

    The types of the factory method's parameters must be distinct. To use multiple parameters of the same type, use a named @Assisted annotation to disambiguate the parameters. The names must be applied to the factory method's parameters:
    public interface PaymentFactory {
       Payment create(
           @Assisted("startDate") Date startDate,
           @Assisted("dueDate") Date dueDate,
           Money amount);
     } 
    ...and to the concrete type's constructor parameters:
    public class RealPayment implements Payment {
       @Inject
       public RealPayment(
          CreditService creditService,
          AuthService authService,
          @Assisted("startDate") Date startDate,
          @Assisted("dueDate") Date dueDate,
          @Assisted Money amount) {
         ...
       }
     }

    Values are created by Guice

    Returned factories use child injectors to create values. The values are eligible for method interception. In addition, @Inject members will be injected before they are returned.

    Backwards compatibility using @AssistedInject

    Instead of the @Inject annotation, you may annotate the constructed classes with @AssistedInject. This triggers a limited backwards-compatibility mode.

    Instead of matching factory method arguments to constructor parameters using their names, the parameters are matched by their order. The first factory method argument is used for the first @Assisted constructor parameter, etc.. Annotation names have no effect.

    Returned values are not created by Guice. These types are not eligible for method interception. They do receive post-construction member injection.

    • Method Detail

      • newFactory

        public static <F> Provider<F> newFactory​(Class<F> factoryType,
                                                 Class<?> implementationType)
        Deprecated.
      • get

        public F get()
        Deprecated.
        Specified by:
        get in interface Provider<F>
        Specified by:
        get in interface jakarta.inject.Provider<F>
      • hashCode

        public int hashCode()
        Deprecated.
        Overrides:
        hashCode in class Object
      • equals

        public boolean equals​(Object obj)
        Deprecated.
        Overrides:
        equals in class Object