Skip navigation links

Package org.apache.commons.beanutils

The Bean Introspection Utilities component of the Apache Commons subproject offers low-level utility classes that assist in getting and setting property values on Java classes that follow the naming design patterns outlined in the JavaBeans Specification, as well as mechanisms for dynamically defining and accessing bean properties.

See: Description

Package org.apache.commons.beanutils Description

The Bean Introspection Utilities component of the Apache Commons subproject offers low-level utility classes that assist in getting and setting property values on Java classes that follow the naming design patterns outlined in the JavaBeans Specification, as well as mechanisms for dynamically defining and accessing bean properties.

Table of Contents

1. Overview

1.1 Background

The JavaBeans name comes from a Java API for a component architecture for the Java language. Writing Java classes that conform to the JavaBeans design patterns makes it easier for Java developers to understand the functionality provided by your class, as well as allowing JavaBeans-aware tools to use Java's introspection capabilities to learn about the properties and operations provided by your class, and present them in a visually appealing manner in development tools.

The JavaBeans Specification describes the complete set of characteristics that makes an arbitrary Java class a JavaBean or not -- and you should consider reading this document to be an important part of developing your Java programming skills. However, the required characteristics of JavaBeans that are important for most development scenarios are listed here:

Using standard Java coding techniques, it is very easy to deal with JavaBeans if you know ahead of time which bean classes you will be using, and which properties you are interested in:

         Employee employee = ...;
         System.out.println("Hello " + employee.getFirstName() + "!");
 

1.2 External Dependencies

The commons-beanutils package requires that the following additional packages be available in the application's class path at runtime:

2. Standard JavaBeans

2.1 Background

As described above, the standard facilities of the Java programming language make it easy and natural to access the property values of your beans using calls to the appropriate getter methods. But what happens in more sophisticated environments where you do not necessarily know ahead of time which bean class you are going to be using, or which property you want to retrieve or modify? The Java language provides classes like java.beans.Introspector, which can examine a Java class at runtime and identify for you the names of the property getter and setter methods, plus the Reflection capabilities to dynamically call such a method. However, these APIs can be difficult to use, and expose the application developer to many unnecessary details of the underlying structure of Java classes. The APIs in the BeanUtils package are intended to simplify getting and setting bean properties dynamically, where the objects you are accessing -- and the names of the properties you care about -- are determined at runtime in your application, rather than as you are writing and compiling your application's classes.

This is the set of needs that are satisfied by the static methods of the PropertyUtils class, which are described further in this section. First, however, some further definitions will prove to be useful:

The general set of possible property types supported by a JavaBean can be broken into three categories -- some of which are supported by the standard JavaBeans specification, and some of which are uniquely supported by the BeanUtils package:

A variety of API methods are provided in the PropertyUtils class to get and set property values of all of these types. In the code fragments below, assume that there are two bean classes defined with the following method signatures:

     public class Employee {
         public Address getAddress(String type);
         public void setAddress(String type, Address address);
         public Employee getSubordinate(int index);
         public void setSubordinate(int index, Employee subordinate);
         public String getFirstName();
         public void setFirstName(String firstName);
         public String getLastName();
         public void setLastName(String lastName);
     }
 

2.2 Basic Property Access

Getting and setting simple property values is, well, simple :-). Check out the following API signatures in the Javadocs:

Using these methods, you might dynamically manipulate the employee's name in an application:

     Employee employee = ...;
     String firstName = (String)
       PropertyUtils.getSimpleProperty(employee, "firstName");
     String lastName = (String)
       PropertyUtils.getSimpleProperty(employee, "lastName");
     ... manipulate the values ...
     PropertyUtils.setSimpleProperty(employee, "firstName", firstName);
     PropertyUtils.setSimpleProperty(employee, "lastName", lastName);
 

For indexed properties, you have two choices - you can either build a subscript into the "property name" string, using square brackets, or you can specify the subscript in a separate argument to the method call:

Only integer constants are allowed when you add a subscript to the property name. If you need to calculate the index of the entry you wish to retrieve, you can use String concatenation to assemble the property name expression. For example, you might do either of the following:

     Employee employee = ...;
     int index = ...;
     String name = "subordinate[" + index + "]";
     Employee subordinate = (Employee)
       PropertyUtils.getIndexedProperty(employee, name);

     Employee employee = ...;
     int index = ...;
     Employee subordinate = (Employee)
       PropertyUtils.getIndexedProperty(employee, "subordinate", index);
 

In a similar manner, there are two possible method signatures for getting and setting mapped properties. The difference is that the extra argument is surrounded by parentheses ("(" and ")") instead of square brackets, and it is considered to be a String-value key used to get or set the appropriate value from an underlying map.

You can, for example, set the employee's home address in either of these two manners:

     Employee employee = ...;
     Address address = ...;
     PropertyUtils.setMappedProperty(employee, "address(home)", address);

     Employee employee = ...;
     Address address = ...;
     PropertyUtils.setMappedProperty(employee, "address", "home", address);
 

2.3 Nested Property Access

In all of the examples above, we have assumed that you wished to retrieve the value of a property of the bean being passed as the first argument to a PropertyUtils method. However, what if the property value you retrieve is really a Java object, and you wish to retrieve a property of that object instead?

For example, assume we really wanted the city property of the employee's home address. Using standard Java programming techniques for direct access to the bean properties, we might write:

     String city = employee.getAddress("home").getCity();
 

The equivalent mechanism using the PropertyUtils class is called nested property access. To use this approach, you concatenate together the property names of the access path, using "." separators -- very similar to the way you can perform nested property access in JavaScript.

The PropertyUtils equivalent to the above Java expression would be:

     String city = (String)
       PropertyUtils.getNestedProperty(employee, "address(home).city");
 

Finally, for convenience, PropertyUtils provides method signatures that accept any arbitrary combination of simple, indexed, and mapped property access, using any arbitrary level of nesting:

which you might use like this:

     Employee employee = ...;
     String city = (String) PropertyUtils.getProperty(employee,
       "subordinate[3].address(home).city");
 

2.4 Customizing Introspection

As was pointed out, BeanUtils relies on conventions defined by the JavaBeans specification to determine the properties available for a specific bean class. Thus all classes conforming to these conventions can be used out of the box.

Sometimes an application has to deal with classes using different conventions. For instance, fluent APIs allowing method chaining are not compliant to the JavaBeans specification because here set methods have non-void return values. From version 1.9.0 onwards, BeanUtils supports customization of its introspection mechanism. This allows an application to extend or modify the default discovery of bean properties.

The key to this extension mechanism is the BeanIntrospector interface. The purpose of an object implementing this interface is to process a specific target class and create corresponding PropertyDescriptor objects for the properties it detects. Per default, BeanUtils uses a DefaultBeanIntrospector object which detects properties compatible with the JavaBeans specification.

In order to extend the property discovery mechanism, PropertyUtils offers the PropertyUtils.addBeanIntrospector(BeanIntrospector) method. Here a custom BeanIntrospector implementation can be passed in. During introspection of a class, this custom introspector is then called, and it can add the properties it has detected to the total result. As an example of such a custom BeanIntrospector implementation, BeanUtils ships with the FluentPropertyBeanIntrospector class. This implementation can detect properties whose set methods have a non-void return type - thus enabling support for typical properties in a fluent API.

2.5 Suppressing Properties

The mechanism of customizing bean introspection described in the previous section can also be used to suppress specific properties. There is a specialized BeanIntrospector implementation that does exactly this: SuppressPropertiesBeanIntrospector. When creating an instance, a collection with the names of properties that should not be accessible on beans has to be provided. These properties will then be removed if they have been detected by other BeanIntrospector instances during processing of a bean class.

A good use case for suppressing properties is the special class property which is per default available for all beans; it is generated from the getClass() method inherited from Object which follows the naming conventions for property get methods. Exposing this property in an uncontrolled way can lead to a security vulnerability as it allows access to the class loader. More information can be found at https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/BEANUTILS-463.

Because the class property is undesired in many use cases there is already an instance of SuppressPropertiesBeanIntrospector which is configured to suppress this property. It can be obtained via the SUPPRESS_CLASS constant of SuppressPropertiesBeanIntrospector.

3. Dynamic Beans (DynaBeans)

3.1 Background

The PropertyUtils class described in the preceding section is designed to provide dynamic property access on existing JavaBean classes, without modifying them in any way. A different use case for dynamic property access is when you wish to represent a dynamically calculated set of property values as a JavaBean, but without having to actually write a Java class to represent these properties. Besides the effort savings in not having to create and maintain a separate Java class, this ability also means you can deal with situations where the set of properties you care about is determined dynamically (think of representing the result set of an SQL select as a set of JavaBeans ...).

To support this use case, the BeanUtils package provides the DynaBean interface, which must be implemented by a bean class actually implementing the interface's methods, and the associated DynaClass interface that defines the set of properties supported by a particular group of DynaBeans, in much the same way that java.lang.Class defines the set of properties supported by all instances of a particular JavaBean class.

For example, the Employee class used in the examples above might be implemented as a DynaBean, rather than as a standard JavaBean. You can access its properties like this:

     DynaBean employee = ...; // Details depend on which
                              // DynaBean implementation you use
     String firstName = (String) employee.get("firstName");
     Address homeAddress = (Address) employee.get("address", "home");
     Object subordinate = employee.get("subordinate", 2);
 

One very important convenience feature should be noted: the PropertyUtils property getter and setter methods understand how to access properties in DynaBeans. Therefore, if the bean you pass as the first argument to, say, PropertyUtils.getSimpleProperty() is really a DynaBean implementation, the call will get converted to the appropriate DynaBean getter method transparently. Thus, you can base your application's dynamic property access totally on the PropertyUtils APIs, if you wish, and use them to access either standard JavaBeans or DynaBeans without having to care ahead of time how a particular bean is implemented.

Because DynaBean and DynaClass are interfaces, they may be implemented multiple times, in different ways, to address different usage scenarios. The following subsections describe the implementations that are provided as a part of the standard BeanUtils package, although you are encouraged to provide your own custom implementations for cases where the standard implementations are not sufficient.

3.2 BasicDynaBean and BasicDynaClass

The BasicDynaBean and BasicDynaClass implementation provides a basic set of dynamic property capabilities where you want to dynamically define the set of properties (described by instances of DynaProperty). You start by defining the DynaClass that establishes the set of properties you care about:

     DynaProperty[] props = new DynaProperty[]{
         new DynaProperty("address", java.util.Map.class),
         new DynaProperty("subordinate", mypackage.Employee[].class),
         new DynaProperty("firstName", String.class),
         new DynaProperty("lastName",  String.class)
       };
     BasicDynaClass dynaClass = new BasicDynaClass("employee", null, props);
 

Note that the 'dynaBeanClass' argument (in the constructor of BasicDynaClass) can have the value of null. In this case, the value of dynaClass.getDynaBeanClass will just be the Class for BasicDynaBean.

Next, you use the newInstance() method of this DynaClass to create new DynaBean instances that conform to this DynaClass, and populate its initial property values (much as you would instantiate a new standard JavaBean and then call its property setters):

     DynaBean employee = dynaClass.newInstance();
     employee.set("address", new HashMap());
     employee.set("subordinate", new mypackage.Employee[0]);
     employee.set("firstName", "Fred");
     employee.set("lastName", "Flintstone");
 

Note that the DynaBean class was declared to be DynaBean instead of BasicDynaBean. In general, if you are using DynaBeans, you will not want to care about the actual implementation class that is being used -- you only care about declaring that it is a DynaBean so that you can use the DynaBean APIs.

As stated above, you can pass a DynaBean instance as the first argument to a PropertyUtils method that gets and sets properties, and it will be interpreted as you expect -- the dynamic properties of the DynaBean will be retrieved or modified, instead of underlying properties on the actual BasicDynaBean implementation class.

3.3 ResultSetDynaClass (Wraps ResultSet in DynaBeans)

A very common use case for DynaBean APIs is to wrap other collections of "stuff" that do not normally present themselves as JavaBeans. One of the most common collections that would be nice to wrap is the java.sql.ResultSet that is returned when you ask a JDBC driver to perform a SQL SELECT statement. Commons BeanUtils offers a standard mechanism for making each row of the result set visible as a DynaBean, which you can utilize as shown in this example:

   Connection conn = ...;
   Statement stmt = conn.createStatement();
   ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery
     ("select account_id, name from customers");
   Iterator rows = (new ResultSetDynaClass(rs)).iterator();
   while (rows.hasNext()) {
     DynaBean row = (DynaBean) rows.next();
     System.out.println("Account number is " +
                        row.get("account_id") +
                        " and name is " + row.get("name"));
   }
   rs.close();
   stmt.close();
 

3.4 RowSetDynaClass (Disconnected ResultSet as DynaBeans)

Although ResultSetDynaClass is a very useful technique for representing the results of an SQL query as a series of DynaBeans, an important problem is that the underlying ResultSet must remain open throughout the period of time that the rows are being processed by your application. This hinders the ability to use ResultSetDynaClass as a means of communicating information from the model layer to the view layer in a model-view-controller architecture such as that provided by the Struts Framework, because there is no easy mechanism to assure that the result set is finally closed (and the underlying Connection returned to its connection pool, if you are using one).

The RowSetDynaClass class represents a different approach to this problem. When you construct such an instance, the underlying data is copied into a set of in-memory DynaBeans that represent the result. The advantage of this technique, of course, is that you can immediately close the ResultSet (and the corresponding Statement), normally before you even process the actual data that was returned. The disadvantage, of course, is that you must pay the performance and memory costs of copying the result data, and the result data must fit entirely into available heap memory. For many environments (particularly in web applications), this tradeoff is usually quite beneficial.

As an additional benefit, the RowSetDynaClass class is defined to implement java.io.Serializable, so that it (and the DynaBeans that correspond to each row of the result) can be conveniently serialized and deserialized (as long as the underlying column values are also Serializable). Thus, RowSetDynaClass represents a very convenient way to transmit the results of an SQL query to a remote Java-based client application (such as an applet).

The normal usage pattern for a RowSetDynaClass will look something like this:

     Connection conn = ...;  // Acquire connection from pool
     Statement stmt = conn.createStatement();
     ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery("SELECT ...");
     RowSetDynaClass rsdc = new RowSetDynaClass(rs);
     rs.close();
     stmt.close();
     ...;                    // Return connection to pool
     List rows = rsdc.getRows();
     ...;                   // Process the rows as desired
 

3.5 WrapDynaBean and WrapDynaClass

OK, you've tried the DynaBeans APIs and they are cool -- very simple get() and set() methods provide easy access to all of the dynamically defined simple, indexed, and mapped properties of your DynaBeans. You'd like to use the DynaBean APIs to access all of your beans, but you've got a bunch of existing standard JavaBeans classes to deal with as well. This is where the WrapDynaBean (and its associated WrapDynaClass) come into play. As the name implies, a WrapDynaBean is used to "wrap" the DynaBean APIs around an existing standard JavaBean class. To use it, simply create the wrapper like this:

     MyBean bean = ...;
     DynaBean wrapper = new WrapDynaBean(bean);
     String firstName = wrapper.get("firstName");
 

Note that, although appropriate WrapDynaClass instances are created internally, you never need to deal with them.

3.6 Lazy DynaBeans

You bought into the DynaBeans because it saves coding all those POJO JavaBeans but you're here because lazy caught your eye and wondered whats that about? What makes these flavors of DynaBean lazy are the following features:

1. LazyDynaBean is the standard lazy bean implementation. By default it is associated with a LazyDynaClass which implements the MutableDynaClass interface - however it can be used with any MutableDynaClass implementation. The question is how do I use it? - well it can be as simple as creating a new bean and then calling the getters/setters...

     DynaBean dynaBean = new LazyDynaBean();

     dynaBean.set("foo", "bar");                   // simple

     dynaBean.set("customer", "title", "Mr");      // mapped
     dynaBean.set("customer", "surname", "Smith"); // mapped

     dynaBean.set("address", 0, addressLine1);     // indexed
     dynaBean.set("address", 1, addressLine2);     // indexed
     dynaBean.set("address", 2, addressLine3);     // indexed
 

2. LazyDynaMap is a light weight DynaBean facade to a Map with all the usual lazy features. Its light weight because it doesn't have an associated DynaClass containing all the properties. In fact it actually implements the DynaClass interface itself (and MutableDynaClass) and derives all the DynaClass information from the actual contents of the Map. A LazyDynaMap can be created around an existing Map or can instantiate its own Map. After any DynaBean processing has finished the Map can be retrieved and the DynaBean facade discarded.

If you need a new Map then to use....

     DynaBean dynaBean = new LazyDynaMap();        // create DynaBean

     dynaBean.set("foo", "bar");                   // simple
     dynaBean.set("customer", "title", "Mr");      // mapped
     dynaBean.set("address", 0, addressLine1);     // indexed

     Map myMap = dynaBean.getMap()                 // retrieve the Map
 

or to use with an existing Map ....

     Map myMap = ....                             // exisitng Map
     DynaBean dynaBean = new LazyDynaMap(myMap);  // wrap Map in DynaBean
     dynaBean.set("foo", "bar");                  // set properties
 

3. LazyDynaList is lazy list for DynaBeans java.util.Map's or POJO beans. See the Javadoc for more details and example usage.

4. LazyDynaClass extends BasicDynaClass and implements the MutableDynaClass interface. It can be used with other DynaBean implementations, but it is the default DynaClass used by LazyDynaBean. When using the LazyDynaBean there may be no need to have anything to do with the DynaClass. However sometimes there is a requirement to set up the DynaClass first - perhaps to define the type of array for an indexed property, or if using the DynaBean in restricted mode (see note below) is required. Doing so is straight forward...

Either create a LazyDynaClass first...

     MutableDynaClass dynaClass = new LazyDynaClass();    // create DynaClass

     dynaClass.add("amount", java.lang.Integer.class);    // add property
     dynaClass.add("orders", OrderBean[].class);          // add indexed property
     dynaClass.add("orders", java.util.TreeMapp.class);   // add mapped property

     DynaBean dynaBean = new LazyDynaBean(dynaClass);     // Create DynaBean with associated DynaClass
 

or create a LazyDynaBean and get the DynaClass...

     DynaBean dynaBean = new LazyDynaBean();              // Create LazyDynaBean
     MutableDynaClass dynaClass =
              (MutableDynaClass)dynaBean.getDynaClass();  // get DynaClass

     dynaClass.add("amount", java.lang.Integer.class);    // add property
     dynaClass.add("myBeans", myPackage.MyBean[].class);  // add 'array' indexed property
     dynaClass.add("myMap", java.util.TreeMapp.class);    // add mapped property
 

NOTE: One feature of MutableDynaClass is that it has a Restricted property. When the DynaClass is restricted no properties can be added or removed from the DynaClass. Neither the LazyDynaBean or LazyDynaMap will add properties automatically if the DynaClass is restricted.

4. Data Type Conversions

4.1 Background

So far, we've only considered the cases where the data types of the dynamically accessed properties are known, and where we can use Java casts to perform type conversions. What happens if you want to automatically perform type conversions when casting is not possible? The BeanUtils package provides a variety of APIs and design patterns for performing this task as well.

4.2 BeanUtils and ConvertUtils Conversions

A very common use case (and the situation that caused the initial creation of the BeanUtils package) was the desire to convert the set of request parameters that were included in a javax.servlet.HttpServletRequest received by a web application into a set of corresponding property setter calls on an arbitrary JavaBean. (This is one of the fundamental services provided by the Struts Framework, which uses BeanUtils internally to implement this functionality.)

In an HTTP request, the set of included parameters is made available as a series of String (or String array, if there is more than one value for the same parameter name) instances, which need to be converted to the underlying data type. The BeanUtils class provides property setter methods that accept String values, and automatically convert them to appropriate property types for Java primitives (such as int or boolean), and property getter methods that perform the reverse conversion. Finally, a populate() method is provided that accepts a java.util.Map containing a set of property values (keyed by property name), and calls all of the appropriate setters whenever the underlying bean has a property with the same name as one of the request parameters. So, you can perform the all-in-one property setting operation like this:

     HttpServletRequest request = ...;
     MyBean bean = ...;
     HashMap map = new HashMap();
     Enumeration names = request.getParameterNames();
     while (names.hasMoreElements()) {
       String name = (String) names.nextElement();
       map.put(name, request.getParameterValues(name));
     }
     BeanUtils.populate(bean, map);
 

The BeanUtils class relies on conversion methods defined in the ConvertUtils class to perform the actual conversions, and these methods are availablve for direct use as well. WARNING - It is likely that the hard coded use of ConvertUtils methods will be deprecated in the future, and replaced with a mechanism that allows you to plug in your own implementations of the Converter interface instead. Therefore, new code should not be written with reliance on ConvertUtils.

4.3 Defining Your Own Converters

The ConvertUtils class supports the ability to define and register your own String --> Object conversions for any given Java class. Once registered, such converters will be used transparently by all of the BeanUtils methods (including populate()). To create and register your own converter, follow these steps:

4.4 Locale Aware Conversions

The standard classes in org.apache.commons.beanutils are not locale aware. This gives them a cleaner interface and makes then easier to use in situations where the locale is not important.

Extended, locale-aware analogues can be found in org.apache.commons.beanutils.locale . These are built along the same lines as the basic classes but support localization.

5. Utility Objects And Static Utility Classes

Background

So far, the examples have covered the static utility classes (BeanUtils, ConvertUtils and PropertyUtils). These are easy to use but are somewhat inflexible. These all share the same registered converters and the same caches.

This functionality can also be accessed through utility objects (in fact, the static utility class use worker instances of these classes). For each static utility class, there is a corresponding class with the same functionality that can be instantiated:

Static Utility ClassUtility Object
BeanUtilsBeanUtilsBean
ConvertUtilsConvertUtilsBean
PropertyUtilsPropertyUtilsBean

Creating an instances allow gives guarenteed control of the caching and registration to the code that creates it.

6. Collections

6.1 Comparing Beans

org.apache.commons.beanutils.BeanComparator is a Comparator implementation that compares beans based on a shared property value.

6.2 Operating On Collections Of Beans

The Closure interface in commons-collections encapsulates a block of code that executes on an arbitrary input Object. Commons-collections contains code that allows Closures to be applied to the contents of a Collection. For more details, see the commons-collections documentation.

BeanPropertyValueChangeClosure is a Closure that sets a specified property to a particular value. A typical usage is to combine this with commons-collections so that all the beans in a collection can have a particular property set to a particular value.

For example, set the activeEmployee property to TRUE for an entire collection:

     // create the closure
     BeanPropertyValueChangeClosure closure =
         new BeanPropertyValueChangeClosure( "activeEmployee", Boolean.TRUE );

     // update the Collection
     CollectionUtils.forAllDo( peopleCollection, closure );
   

6.3 Querying Or Filtering Collections Of Beans

The Predicate interface in commons-collections encapsulates an evaluation of an input Object that returns either true or false. Commons-collections contains code that allows Predicates to be applied to be used to filter collections. For more details, see the commons-collections documentation.

BeanPropertyValueEqualsPredicate is a Predicate that evaluates a set property value against a given value. A typical usage is (in combination with commons-collections) to filter collections on the basis of a property value.

For example, to filter a collection to find all beans where active employee is false use:

     BeanPropertyValueEqualsPredicate predicate =
         new BeanPropertyValueEqualsPredicate( "activeEmployee", Boolean.FALSE );

     // filter the Collection
     CollectionUtils.filter( peopleCollection, predicate );
 

6.4 Transforming Collections Of Beans

The Transformer interface in commons-collections encapsulates the transformation of an input Object into an output object. Commons-collections contains code that allows Transformers to be applied produce a collection of outputs from a collection of inputs. For more details, see the commons-collections documentation.

BeanToPropertyTransformer is a Transformer implementation that transforms a bean into it's property value.

For example, to find all cities that are contained in the address of each person property of each bean in a collection:

     // create the transformer
     BeanToPropertyValueTransformer transformer = new BeanToPropertyValueTransformer( "person.address.city" );

     // transform the Collection
     Collection peoplesCities = CollectionUtils.collect( peopleCollection, transformer );
     

7. Frequently Asked Questions

Why Can't BeanUtils Find My Method?

The BeanUtils package relies on introspection rather than reflection. This means that it will find only JavaBean compliant properties.

There are some subtleties of this specification that can catch out the unwary:

How Do I Set The BeanComparator Order To Be Ascending/Descending?

BeanComparator relies on an internal Comparator to perform the actual comparisions. By default, org.apache.commons.collections.comparators.ComparableComparator is used which imposes a natural order. If you want to change the order, then a custom Comparator should be created and passed into the appropriate constructor.

For example:

     import org.apache.commons.collections.comparators.ComparableComparator;
     import org.apache.commons.collections.comparators.ReverseComparator;
     import org.apache.commons.beanutils.BeanComparator;
     ...
     BeanComparator reversedNaturalOrderBeanComparator
         = new BeanComparator("propertyName", new ReverseComparator(new ComparableComparator()));
     Collections.sort(myList, reversedNaturalOrderBeanComparator);
     ...
 
Skip navigation links

Copyright © 2000–2019 The Apache Software Foundation. All rights reserved.