When a method is invoked, the types of the argument values are checked and
possibly converted.
invokes
ClassWarninggetMethod()
to cause a typical unchecked conversion warning:
import java.lang.reflect.Method;
public class ClassWarning {
void m() {
try {
Class c = ClassWarning.class;
Method m = c.getMethod("m"); // warning
// production code should handle this exception more gracefully
} catch (NoSuchMethodException x) {
x.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
$ javac ClassWarning.java
Note: ClassWarning.java uses unchecked or unsafe operations.
Note: Recompile with -Xlint:unchecked for details.
$ javac -Xlint:unchecked ClassWarning.java
ClassWarning.java:7: warning: [unchecked] unchecked call to getMethod(java.lang.String,java.lang.Class<?>...) as a member of the raw type java.lang.Class
Method m = c.getMethod("m"); // warning
^
1 warning
Class. Since c is declared as a raw type (has no type
parameters) and the corresponding parameter of
getMethod()
is a parameterized type, an unchecked conversion occurs. The compiler is
required to generate a warning. (See The
Java Language Specification, Third Edition, sections 5.1.9
and 5.3.)
There are two possible solutions. The more preferable it to modify the
declaration of c to include an appropriate generic type. In this
case, the declaration should be:
Class<?> c = warn.getClass();
@SuppressWarnings
preceding the problematic statement.
Class c = ClassWarning.class;
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
Method m = c.getMethod("m"); // warning gone
@SuppressWarnings.
Class.newInstance()
will throw an
InstantiationException
if an attempt is made to create a new instance of the class and the
zero-argument constructor is not visible. The
example illustrates the resulting stack trace.
ClassTrouble
class Cls {
private Cls() {}
}
public class ClassTrouble {
public static void main(String... args) {
try {
Class<?> c = Class.forName("Cls");
c.newInstance(); // InstantiationException
// production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully
} catch (InstantiationException x) {
x.printStackTrace();
} catch (IllegalAccessException x) {
x.printStackTrace();
} catch (ClassNotFoundException x) {
x.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
$ java ClassTrouble
java.lang.IllegalAccessException: Class ClassTrouble can not access a member of
class Cls with modifiers "private"
at sun.reflect.Reflection.ensureMemberAccess(Reflection.java:65)
at java.lang.Class.newInstance0(Class.java:349)
at java.lang.Class.newInstance(Class.java:308)
at ClassTrouble.main(ClassTrouble.java:9)
Class.newInstance()
behaves very much like the new keyword and will fail for the same
reasons new would fail. The typical solution in reflection is to
take advantage of the
java.lang.reflect.AccessibleObject
class which provides the ability to suppress access control checks; however,
this approach will not work because
java.lang.Class
does not extend
AccessibleObject. The only solution is to modify the code to use
Constructor.newInstance()
which does extend
AccessibleObject.
Constructor.newInstance()
for the reasons described in the
Creating New Class Instances
section in the Members lesson.
Additional examples of potential problems using
Constructor.newInstance()
may be found in the
Constructor Troubleshooting
section of the Members lesson.