@Documented
@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Target(value=FIELD)
public @interface Expose
This annotation has no effect unless you build Gson
with a GsonBuilder
and invoke
GsonBuilder.excludeFieldsWithoutExposeAnnotation()
method.
Here is an example of how this annotation is meant to be used:
public class User { @Expose private String firstName; @Expose(serialize = false) private String lastName; @Expose (serialize = false, deserialize = false) private String emailAddress; private String password; }If you created Gson with
new Gson()
, the toJson()
and fromJson()
methods will use the password
field along-with firstName
, lastName
,
and emailAddress
for serialization and deserialization. However, if you created Gson
with Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().excludeFieldsWithoutExposeAnnotation().create()
then the toJson()
and fromJson()
methods of Gson will exclude the
password
field. This is because the password
field is not marked with the
@Expose
annotation. Gson will also exclude lastName
and emailAddress
from serialization since serialize
is set to false
. Similarly, Gson will
exclude emailAddress
from deserialization since deserialize
is set to false.
Note that another way to achieve the same effect would have been to just mark the
password
field as transient
, and Gson would have excluded it even with default
settings. The @Expose
annotation is useful in a style of programming where you want to
explicitly specify all fields that should get considered for serialization or deserialization.
Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
deserialize
If
true , the field marked with this annotation is deserialized from the JSON. |
boolean |
serialize
If
true , the field marked with this annotation is written out in the JSON while
serializing. |
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