Annotation Type XmlRootElement
@Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Target(value=TYPE) public @interface XmlRootElement
Maps a class or an enum type to an XML element.
Usage
The @XmlRootElement annotation can be used with the following program elements:
- a top level class
- an enum type
See "Package Specification" in javax.xml.bind.package javadoc for additional common information.
When a top level class or an enum type is annotated with the @XmlRootElement annotation, then its value is represented as XML element in an XML document.
This annotation can be used with the following annotations: XmlType
, XmlEnum
, XmlAccessorType
, XmlAccessorOrder
.
Example 1: Associate an element with XML Schema type
// Example: Code fragment @XmlRootElement class Point { int x; int y; Point(int _x,int _y) {x=_x;y=_y;} }
//Example: Code fragment corresponding to XML output marshal( new Point(3,5), System.out);
<!-- Example: XML output --> <point> <x> 3 <y> 5 </point>The annotation causes an global element declaration to be produced in the schema. The global element declaration is associated with the XML schema type to which the class is mapped.
<!-- Example: XML schema definition --> <xs:element name="point" type="point"/> <xs:complexType name="point"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="x" type="xs:int"/> <xs:element name="y" type="xs:int"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:complexType>
Example 2: Orthogonality to type inheritance
An element declaration annotated on a type is not inherited by its derived types. The following example shows this.
// Example: Code fragment @XmlRootElement class Point3D extends Point { int z; Point3D(int _x,int _y,int _z) {super(_x,_y);z=_z;} } //Example: Code fragment corresponding to XML output * marshal( new Point3D(3,5,0), System.out ); <!-- Example: XML output --> <!-- The element name is point3D not point --> <point3D> <x>3</x> <y>5</y> <z>0</z> </point3D> <!-- Example: XML schema definition --> <xs:element name="point3D" type="point3D"/> <xs:complexType name="point3D"> <xs:complexContent> <xs:extension base="point"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="z" type="xs:int"/> </xs:sequence> </xs:extension> </xs:complexContent> </xs:complexType>Example 3: Associate a global element with XML Schema type to which the class is mapped.
//Example: Code fragment @XmlRootElement(name="PriceElement") public class USPrice { @XmlElement public java.math.BigDecimal price; } <!-- Example: XML schema definition --> <xs:element name="PriceElement" type="USPrice"/> <xs:complexType name="USPrice"> <xs:sequence> <xs:element name="price" type="xs:decimal"/> </sequence> </xs:complexType>
- Since:
- JAXB2.0
Optional Elements
Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
String |
name local name of the XML element. |
String |
namespace namespace name of the XML element. |
Elements
namespace
public abstract String namespace
namespace name of the XML element.
If the value is "##default", then the XML namespace name is derived from the package of the class ( XmlSchema
). If the package is unnamed, then the XML namespace is the default empty namespace.
- Default:
- "##default"
name
public abstract String name
local name of the XML element.
If the value is "##default", then the name is derived from the class name.
- Default:
- "##default"
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https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/javax/xml/bind/annotation/XmlRootElement.html