Just as in non-reflective code, reflection supports the ability to dynamically create arrays of arbitrary type and dimensions via
java.lang.reflect.Array.newInstance()
. Consider
, a basic interpreter capable of dynamically creating arrays. The syntax that will be parsed is as follows:ArrayCreator
fully_qualified_class_name variable_name[] = { val1, val2, val3, ... }
Assume that the fully_qualified_class_name
represents a class that has a constructor with a single
String
argument. The dimensions of the array are determined by the number of values provided. The following example will construct an instance of an array of fully_qualified_class_name
and populate its values with instances given by val1
, val2
, etc. (This example assumes familiarity with
Class.getConstructor()
and
java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance()
. For a discussion of the reflection APIs for
Constructor
see the Creating New Class Instances section of this trail.)
import java.lang.reflect.Array; import java.lang.reflect.Constructor; import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException; import java.util.regex.Pattern; import java.util.regex.Matcher; import java.util.Arrays; import static java.lang.System.out; public class ArrayCreator { private static String s = "java.math.BigInteger bi[] = { 123, 234, 345 }"; private static Pattern p = Pattern.compile("^\\s*(\\S+)\\s*\\w+\\[\\].*\\{\\s*([^}]+)\\s*\\}"); public static void main(String... args) { Matcher m = p.matcher(s); if (m.find()) { String cName = m.group(1); String[] cVals = m.group(2).split("[\\s,]+"); int n = cVals.length; try { Class<?> c = Class.forName(cName); Object o = Array.newInstance(c, n); for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { String v = cVals[i]; Constructor ctor = c.getConstructor(String.class); Object val = ctor.newInstance(v); Array.set(o, i, val); } Object[] oo = (Object[])o; out.format("%s[] = %s%n", cName, Arrays.toString(oo)); // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (ClassNotFoundException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (NoSuchMethodException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (IllegalAccessException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (InstantiationException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (InvocationTargetException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } } }
$ java ArrayCreator java.math.BigInteger [] = [123, 234, 345]
The above example shows one case where it may be desirable to create an array via reflection; namely if the component type is not known until runtime. In this case, the code uses
Class.forName()
to get a class for the desired component type and then calls a specific constructor to initialize each component of the array before setting the corresponding array value.