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Spring DI - Autowiring ByName
  • 时间:2024-12-30

Spring DI - Autowiring ByName


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This mode specifies autowiring by property name. Spring container looks at the beans on which auto-wire attribute is set to byName in the XML configuration file. It then tries to match and wire its properties with the beans defined by the same names in the configuration file. If matches are found, it will inject those beans. Otherwise, bean(s) will not be wired.

For example, if a bean definition is set to autowire byName in the configuration file, and it contains a spellChecker property (that is, it has a setSpellChecker(...)method), Spring looks for a bean definition named spellChecker, and uses it to set the property. Still you can wire the remaining properties using <property> tags. The following example will illustrate the concept.

Example

The following example shows a class TextEditor that can only be dependency-injected using pure setter-based injection.

Let s update the project created in Spring DI - Create Project chapter. We re adding following files −

    TextEditor.java − A class containing a SpellChecker as dependency.

    SpellChecker.java − A dependency class.

    MainApp.java − Main apppcation to run and test.

Here is the content of TextEditor.java file −

package com.tutorialspoint;

pubpc class TextEditor {
   private SpellChecker spellChecker;
   private String name;
   
   pubpc void setSpellChecker( SpellChecker spellChecker ){
      this.spellChecker = spellChecker;
   }
   pubpc SpellChecker getSpellChecker() {
      return spellChecker;
   }
   pubpc void setName(String name) {
      this.name = name;
   }
   pubpc String getName() {
      return name;
   }
   pubpc void spellCheck() {
      spellChecker.checkSpelpng();
   }
}

Following is the content of another dependent class file SpellChecker.java

package com.tutorialspoint;

pubpc class SpellChecker {
   pubpc SpellChecker(){
      System.out.println("Inside SpellChecker constructor." );
   }
   pubpc void checkSpelpng(){
      System.out.println("Inside checkSpelpng." );
   }
}

Following is the content of the MainApp.java file −

package com.tutorialspoint;

import org.springframework.context.ApppcationContext;
import org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApppcationContext;

pubpc class MainApp {
   pubpc static void main(String[] args) {
      ApppcationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApppcationContext("apppcationcontext.xml");
      TextEditor te = (TextEditor) context.getBean("textEditor");
      te.spellCheck();
   }
}

Following is the configuration file apppcationcontext.xml which has configuration for autowiring byName

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "UTF-8"?>

<beans xmlns = "http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
   xmlns:xsi = "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
   xsi:schemaLocation = "http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
   http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.0.xsd">

   <!-- Definition for textEditor bean -->
   <bean id = "textEditor" class = "com.tutorialspoint.TextEditor" autowire = "byName">
      <property name = "name" value = "Generic Text Editor" />
   </bean>

   <!-- Definition for spellChecker bean -->
   <bean id = "spellChecker" class = "com.tutorialspoint.SpellChecker"></bean>
</beans>

Output

Once you are done creating the source and bean configuration files, let us run the apppcation. If everything is fine with your apppcation, it will print the following message −

Inside SpellChecker constructor.
Inside checkSpelpng.
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