Is there a way to add references to one or more of a method's parameters from the method documentation bod开发者_JAVA技巧y? Something like:
/**
* When {@paramref a} is null, we rely on b for the discombobulation.
*
* @param a this is one of the parameters
* @param b another param
*/
void foo(String a, int b)
{...}
As far as I can tell after reading the docs for javadoc there is no such feature.
Don't use <code>foo</code>
as recommended in other answers; you can use {@code foo}
. This is especially good to know when you refer to a generic type such as {@code Iterator<String>}
-- sure looks nicer than <code>Iterator<String></code>
, doesn't it!
The correct way of referring to a method parameter is like this:
As you can see in the Java Source of the java.lang.String
class:
/**
* Allocates a new <code>String</code> that contains characters from
* a subarray of the character array argument. The <code>offset</code>
* argument is the index of the first character of the subarray and
* the <code>count</code> argument specifies the length of the
* subarray. The contents of the subarray are copied; subsequent
* modification of the character array does not affect the newly
* created string.
*
* @param value array that is the source of characters.
* @param offset the initial offset.
* @param count the length.
* @exception IndexOutOfBoundsException if the <code>offset</code>
* and <code>count</code> arguments index characters outside
* the bounds of the <code>value</code> array.
*/
public String(char value[], int offset, int count) {
if (offset < 0) {
throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset);
}
if (count < 0) {
throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(count);
}
// Note: offset or count might be near -1>>>1.
if (offset > value.length - count) {
throw new StringIndexOutOfBoundsException(offset + count);
}
this.value = new char[count];
this.count = count;
System.arraycopy(value, offset, this.value, 0, count);
}
Parameter references are surrounded by <code></code>
tags, which means that the Javadoc syntax does not provide any way to do such a thing. (I think String.class is a good example of javadoc usage).
I guess you could write your own doclet or taglet to support this behaviour.
Taglet Overview
Doclet Overview
Here is how it is written in Eclipse Temurin JDK 8 sources:
It looks like the only way is or {@code }, but it's not a link - it's just formatting.
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