@Target(value={ANNOTATION_TYPE,METHOD,FIELD,TYPE,PARAMETER}) @Retention(value=RUNTIME) public @interface JsonInclude
Note that the main inclusion criteria (one annotated with value()
)
is checked on Java object level, for the annotated type,
and NOT on JSON output -- so even with JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL
it is possible that JSON null values are output, if object reference
in question is not `null`. An example is AtomicReference
instance constructed to reference null
value: such a value
would be serialized as JSON null, and not filtered out.
To base inclusion on value of contained value(s), you will typically also need
to specify content()
annotation; for example, specifying only
value()
as JsonInclude.Include.NON_EMPTY
for a {link java.util.List} would
exclude List
s with no Java elements, but would include List
s
with `null` elements. To exclude Lists with only nulls, you would use both
annotations like so:
public class Bean { @JsonInclude(value=Include.NON_EMPTY, content=Include.NON_NULL) public List<String> entries; }Similarly you could further exclude Lists, Maps or arrays that only contain "empty" elements, or "non-default" values (see
JsonInclude.Include.NON_EMPTY
and
JsonInclude.Include.NON_DEFAULT
for more details).Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
JsonInclude.Include |
content
Inclusion rule to use for entries ("content") of annotated
Map s; defaults to JsonInclude.Include.ALWAYS . |
JsonInclude.Include |
value
Inclusion rule to use for instances (values) of types (Classes) or
properties annotated; defaults to
JsonInclude.Include.ALWAYS . |
public abstract JsonInclude.Include value
JsonInclude.Include.ALWAYS
.public abstract JsonInclude.Include content
Map
s; defaults to JsonInclude.Include.ALWAYS
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