The SuppressWarnings
annotation interface is applicable
in all declaration contexts, so an @SuppressWarnings
annotation can be used on any element. As a matter of style,
programmers should always use this annotation on the most deeply
nested element where it is effective. For example, if you want to
suppress a warning in a particular method, you should annotate that
method rather than its class.
The set of warnings suppressed in a given element is a union of
the warnings suppressed in all containing elements. For example,
if you annotate a class to suppress one warning and annotate a
method in the class to suppress another, both warnings will be
suppressed in the method. However, note that if a warning is
suppressed in a module-info
file, the suppression applies
to elements within the file and not to types contained
within the module. Likewise, if a warning is suppressed in a
package-info
file, the suppression applies to elements
within the file and not to types contained within the
package.
Java compilers must recognize all the kinds of warnings defined in the Java Language Specification (JLS section 9.6.4.5) which include:
"unchecked"
.
"deprecation"
.
"removal"
.
"preview"
.
Implementation Note
In addition to the mandated suppression strings, the javac
reference implementation recognizes compilation-related warning
names documented in its --help-lint
output.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
public String[] | Returns: the set of warnings to be suppressedThe set of warnings that are to be suppressed by the compiler in the annotated element. |
value | back to summary |
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public String[] value() The set of warnings that are to be suppressed by the compiler in the annotated element. Duplicate names are permitted. The second and successive occurrences of a name are ignored. The presence of unrecognized warning names is not an error: Compilers must ignore any warning names they do not recognize. They are, however, free to emit a warning if an annotation contains an unrecognized warning name.
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