/*
 * Copyright (c) 2005, 2018 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
 *
 * This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
 * terms of the Eclipse Distribution License v. 1.0, which is available at
 * http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/edl-v10.php.
 *
 * SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-3-Clause
 */

package javax.xml.bind.annotation;

import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlJavaTypeAdapter;
import static java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.FIELD;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.METHOD;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;

Generates a wrapper element around XML representation. This is primarily intended to be used to produce a wrapper XML element around collections. The annotation therefore supports two forms of serialization shown below.

   //Example: code fragment
     int[] names;
   // XML Serialization Form 1 (Unwrapped collection)
   <names> ... </names>
   <names> ... </names>
   // XML Serialization Form 2 ( Wrapped collection )
   <wrapperElement>
      <names> value-of-item </names>
      <names> value-of-item </names>
      ....
   </wrapperElement>

The two serialized XML forms allow a null collection to be represented either by absence or presence of an element with a nillable attribute.

Usage

The @XmlElementWrapper annotation can be used with the following program elements:

  • JavaBean property
  • non static, non transient field

The usage is subject to the following constraints:

See "Package Specification" in javax.xml.bind.package javadoc for additional common information.

Author:
  • Kohsuke Kawaguchi, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
  • Sekhar Vajjhala, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
See Also:
Since:1.6, JAXB 2.0
/** * Generates a wrapper element around XML representation. * * This is primarily intended to be used to produce a wrapper * XML element around collections. The annotation therefore supports * two forms of serialization shown below. * * <pre>{@code * //Example: code fragment * int[] names; * * // XML Serialization Form 1 (Unwrapped collection) * <names> ... </names> * <names> ... </names> * * // XML Serialization Form 2 ( Wrapped collection ) * <wrapperElement> * <names> value-of-item </names> * <names> value-of-item </names> * .... * </wrapperElement> * }</pre> * * <p> The two serialized XML forms allow a null collection to be * represented either by absence or presence of an element with a * nillable attribute. * * <p> <b>Usage</b> </p> * <p> * The {@code @XmlElementWrapper} annotation can be used with the * following program elements: * <ul> * <li> JavaBean property </li> * <li> non static, non transient field </li> * </ul> * * <p>The usage is subject to the following constraints: * <ul> * <li> The property must be a collection property </li> * <li> This annotation can be used with the following annotations: * {@link XmlElement}, * {@link XmlElements}, * {@link XmlElementRef}, * {@link XmlElementRefs}, * {@link XmlJavaTypeAdapter}.</li> * </ul> * * <p>See "Package Specification" in javax.xml.bind.package javadoc for * additional common information.</p> * * @author <ul><li>Kohsuke Kawaguchi, Sun Microsystems, Inc.</li><li>Sekhar Vajjhala, Sun Microsystems, Inc.</li></ul> * @see XmlElement * @see XmlElements * @see XmlElementRef * @see XmlElementRefs * @since 1.6, JAXB 2.0 * */
@Retention(RUNTIME) @Target({FIELD, METHOD}) public @interface XmlElementWrapper {
Name of the XML wrapper element. By default, the XML wrapper element name is derived from the JavaBean property name.
/** * Name of the XML wrapper element. By default, the XML wrapper * element name is derived from the JavaBean property name. */
String name() default "##default";
XML target namespace of the XML wrapper element.

If the value is "##default", then the namespace is determined as follows:

  1. If the enclosing package has XmlSchema annotation, and its elementFormDefault is QUALIFIED, then the namespace of the enclosing class.
  2. Otherwise "" (which produces unqualified element in the default namespace.
/** * XML target namespace of the XML wrapper element. * <p> * If the value is "##default", then the namespace is determined * as follows: * <ol> * <li> * If the enclosing package has {@link XmlSchema} annotation, * and its {@link XmlSchema#elementFormDefault() elementFormDefault} * is {@link XmlNsForm#QUALIFIED QUALIFIED}, then the namespace of * the enclosing class. * * <li> * Otherwise "" (which produces unqualified element in the default * namespace. * </ol> */
String namespace() default "##default";
If true, the absence of the collection is represented by using xsi:nil='true'. Otherwise, it is represented by the absence of the element.
/** * If true, the absence of the collection is represented by * using {@code xsi:nil='true'}. Otherwise, it is represented by * the absence of the element. */
boolean nillable() default false;
Customize the wrapper element declaration to be required.

If required() is true, then the corresponding generated XML schema element declaration will have minOccurs="1", to indicate that the wrapper element is always expected.

Note that this only affects the schema generation, and not the unmarshalling or marshalling capability. This is simply a mechanism to let users express their application constraints better.

Since:1.6, JAXB 2.1
/** * Customize the wrapper element declaration to be required. * * <p> * If required() is true, then the corresponding generated * XML schema element declaration will have {@code minOccurs="1"}, * to indicate that the wrapper element is always expected. * * <p> * Note that this only affects the schema generation, and * not the unmarshalling or marshalling capability. This is * simply a mechanism to let users express their application constraints * better. * * @since 1.6, JAXB 2.1 */
boolean required() default false; }