I have got a bean class named Bean1
. In my main method I have got a string containing the name of the variable:
String str= "Bean1";
Now how can I use the String
variable to get the class and access the Bean properties?
Class String. The String class represents character strings. All string literals in Java programs, such as "abc" , are implemented as instances of this class. Strings are constant; their values cannot be changed after they are created.
In Java, string is basically an object that represents sequence of char values. An array of characters works same as Java string. For example: char[] ch={'j','a','v','a','t','p','o','i','n','t'};
You should use Java Reflection API:
Class c = Class.forName("package.name.Bean1");
Then you may use c.newInstance() to instantiate your class. This method uses constructor which does not require parameters.
See details here: http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/reflect/
Step by step:
//1. As Kel has told you (+1), you need to use
//Java reflection to get the Class Object.
Class c = Class.forName("package.name.Bean1");
//2. Then, you can create a new instance of the bean.
//Assuming your Bean1 class has an empty public constructor:
Object o = c.newInstance();
//3. To access the object properties, you need to cast your object to a variable
// of the type you need to access
Bean1 b = (Bean1) o;
//4. Access the properties:
b.setValue1("aValue");
For this last step, you need to know the type of the bean, or a supertype with the properties you need to access. And I guess that you don't know it, if all the information you have on the class is a String with its name.
Using reflection, you could access the methods of the class, but in this case, you would need to know the names and the input parameter types of the methods to be invoked. Going ahead with the example, change the steps 3 and 4:
// 3. Get the method "setValue1" to access the property value1,
//which accepts one parameter, of String type:
Method m=c.getMethod("setValue1", String.class);
// 4. Invoke the method on object o, passing the String "newValue" as argument:
m.invoke(o, "newValue");
Maybe you need to rethink your design, if you don't have all this information avalaible at runtime.
Duplicate of Does Java support variable variables?
Java doesn't support dynamically getting a variable based on a string of its name (also known as variable variables). There's likely a different way of doing what you're trying to do, such as using a Map object to map names to beans. If you edit your question to explain what you want to do in a bit more detail, we might have some more concrete answers.
(On the other hand, if the question was about a class called Bean1, then Kel's right.)
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