Just as in non-reflective code, an array field may be set or retrieved in its entirety or component by component. To set the entire array at once, use
java.lang.reflect.Field.set(Object obj, Object value)
. To retrieve the entire array, use
Field.get(Object)
. Individual components can be set or retrieved using methods in
java.lang.reflect.Array
.
Array
provides methods of the form setFoo()
and getFoo()
for setting and getting components of any primitive type. For example, the component of an int
array may be set with
Array.setInt(Object array, int index, int value)
and may be retrieved with
Array.getInt(Object array, int index)
.
These methods support automatic widening of data types. Therefore,
Array.getShort()
may be used to set the values of an int
array since a 16-bit short
may be widened to a 32-bit int
without loss of data; on the other hand, invoking
Array.setLong()
on an array of int
will cause an
IllegalArgumentException
to be thrown because a 64-bit long
can not be narrowed to for storage in a 32-bit int
with out loss of information. This is true regardless of whether the actual values being passed could be accurately represented in the target data type. The Java Language Specification, Third Edition, sections 5.1.2 and 5.1.3 contains a complete discussion of widening and narrowing conversions.
The components of arrays of reference types (including arrays of arrays) are set and retrieved using
Array.set(Object array, int index, int value)
and
Array.get(Object array, int index)
.
The
example illustrates how to replace the value of a field of type array. In this case, the code replaces the backing array for a
GrowBufferedReader
java.io.BufferedReader
with a larger one. (This assumes that the creation of the original BufferedReader
is in code that is not modifiable; otherwise, it would be trivial to simply use the alternate constructor
BufferedReader(java.io.Reader in, int size)
which accepts an input buffer size.)
import java.io.BufferedReader; import java.io.CharArrayReader; import java.io.FileNotFoundException; import java.io.IOException; import java.lang.reflect.Field; import java.util.Arrays; import static java.lang.System.out; public class GrowBufferedReader { private static final int srcBufSize = 10 * 1024; private static char[] src = new char[srcBufSize]; static { src[srcBufSize - 1] = 'x'; } private static CharArrayReader car = new CharArrayReader(src); public static void main(String... args) { try { BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(car); Class<?> c = br.getClass(); Field f = c.getDeclaredField("cb"); // cb is a private field f.setAccessible(true); char[] cbVal = char[].class.cast(f.get(br)); char[] newVal = Arrays.copyOf(cbVal, cbVal.length * 2); if (args.length > 0 && args[0].equals("grow")) f.set(br, newVal); for (int i = 0; i < srcBufSize; i++) br.read(); // see if the new backing array is being used if (newVal[srcBufSize - 1] == src[srcBufSize - 1]) out.format("Using new backing array, size=%d%n", newVal.length); else out.format("Using original backing array, size=%d%n", cbVal.length); // production code should handle these exceptions more gracefully } catch (FileNotFoundException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (NoSuchFieldException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (IllegalAccessException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } catch (IOException x) { x.printStackTrace(); } } }
$ java GrowBufferedReader grow Using new backing array, size=16384 $ java GrowBufferedReader Using original backing array, size=8192
Note that the above example makes use of the array utility method
java.util.Arrays.copyOf)
.
java.util.Arrays
contains many methods which are convenient when operating on arrays.
Multi-dimensional arrays are simply nested arrays. A two-dimensional array is an array of arrays. A three-dimensional array is an array of two-dimensional arrays, and so on. The
example illustrates how to create and initialize a multi-dimensional array using reflection.CreateMatrix
import java.lang.reflect.Array; import static java.lang.System.out; public class CreateMatrix { public static void main(String... args) { Object matrix = Array.newInstance(int.class, 2, 2); Object row0 = Array.get(matrix, 0); Object row1 = Array.get(matrix, 1); Array.setInt(row0, 0, 1); Array.setInt(row0, 1, 2); Array.setInt(row1, 0, 3); Array.setInt(row1, 1, 4); for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++) for (int j = 0; j < 2; j++) out.format("matrix[%d][%d] = %d%n", i, j, ((int[][])matrix)[i][j]); } }
$ java CreateMatrix matrix[0][0] = 1 matrix[0][1] = 2 matrix[1][0] = 3 matrix[1][1] = 4
The same result could be obtained by using the following code fragment:
Object matrix = Array.newInstance(int.class, 2); Object row0 = Array.newInstance(int.class, 2); Object row1 = Array.newInstance(int.class, 2); Array.setInt(row0, 0, 1); Array.setInt(row0, 1, 2); Array.setInt(row1, 0, 3); Array.setInt(row1, 1, 4); Array.set(matrix, 0, row0); Array.set(matrix, 1, row1);
The variable argument
Array.newInstance(Class<?> componentType, int... dimensions)
provides a convenient way to create multi-dimensional arrays, but the components still need to initialized using the principle that that multi-dimensional arrays are nested arrays. (Reflection does not provide multiple indexed get
/set
methods for this purpose.)