Speed up your Java coding using Lombok 🚀
Abdulcelil Cercenazi
Posted on March 29, 2021
Java has a bad side that everybody hates 😓, what is it?
A lot of boilerplate code is the same for most of the applications we write.
Like what? 🧐
- Getters
- Setters
- Constructors
- Builder pattern
- and many more...
Wouldn't it be nice if someone took care of that work for us?
That is where Lombok introduces itself.
What does it do? 👀
It generates the byte code for those common tasks (Getters, Setters, etc..) and puts them in our .class files which make them usable by the code we write.
How? 🔧
We need to add the Lombok dependency to our Maven build.
Then, we just need to annotate the wanted classes, fields with some Lombok annotations.
Let's look at some code! 👩🏻💻
No Lombok 🧟
public class Human {
private int id;
private String name;
private int ageInYears;
public Human() { }
public Human(int id, String name, int ageInYears) {
this.id = id;
this.name = name;
this.ageInYears = ageInYears;
}
public int getId() {
return id;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public int getAgeInYears() {
return ageInYears;
}
public void setName(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public void setAgeInYears(int ageInYears) {
this.ageInYears = ageInYears;
}
// Builder pattern
public Human id(int id){
this.id = id;
return this;
}
public Human name(String name){
this.name = name;
return this;
}
public Human ageInYears(int ageInYears){
this.ageInYears = ageInYears;
return this;
}
@Override
public String toString(){
return String.format("Human(id=%s, name=%s, ageInYears=%s)",
this.id, this.name, this.ageInYears);
}
}
Lombok 🤴
import lombok.*;
@Getter @Setter
@AllArgsConstructor @NoArgsConstructor
@Builder @ToString
public class Human {
@Setter(AccessLevel.NONE)
private int id;
private String name;
private int ageInYears;
}
The Maven dependency looks like this
<dependency>
<groupId>org.projectlombok</groupId>
<artifactId>lombok</artifactId>
<version>1.18.16</version>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
Note: the version part will change depending on the last release of Lombok.
What just happened? 🕵️♀️ 🕵️
- we used annotations to generate
- Getters
- Setters
- Constructors
- Builder pattern
- toString implementation
We can also make tweaks on some annotations, like the setter for the id field.
- We set its access level to None, meaning that we don't a setter to be generated for it.
Was it worth it? 📊📊
We wrote 52 lines when not using Lombok.
We wrote 8 lines when using Lombok.
Lombok helped us shrink our code size by nearly 4 times. Those numbers can go up even more when having more variables in our classes.
Lombok has a lot more annotations that offer a ton of help, to view them all visit their website.
Conclusion 👇🏾
Lombok helps us focus on our business code and not worry about the little details of getters/setters/constructors/common design patterns and other Java constructs.
Code 👨🏽💻
Posted on March 29, 2021
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