Kotlin invoke getter/setter reflectively
You can use Kotlin reflection, which requires you to add kotlin-reflect
as a dependency to your project.
Here you can find kotlin-reflect
for Kotlin 1.0.5, or pick another version if you use different Kotlin version.
After that, you can rewrite your code as follows:
val properties = myObject.javaClass.kotlin.memberProperties
for (p in properties.filterIsInstance<KMutableProperty<*>>()) {
val data = when (p.returnType.javaType) {
Int::class.javaPrimitiveType,
Int::class.javaObjectType -> foo
Double::class.javaPrimitiveType,
Double::class.javaObjectType -> bar
String::class.java -> baz
else -> null
}
if (data != null)
p.setter.call(myObject, data)
}
Some details:
Despite using Kotlin reflection, this approach works with Java classes as well, their fields and accessors will be seen as properties, as described here.
Just like with Java reflection,
memberProperties
returnspublic
properties of this type and all its supertypes. To get all the properties declared in the type (including theprivate
ones, but not those from the supertypes), usedeclaredMemberProperties
instead..filterIsInstance<KMutableProperty<*>
returns only the mutable properties, so that you can use theirp.setter
later. If you need to iterate over the getters of all the properties, remove it.In the
when
block, I comparedp.returnType.javaType
toInt::class.javaPrimitiveType
andInt::class.javaObjectType
, because what'sInt
in Kotlin can be mapped to either Javaint
orjava.lang.Integer
depending on its usage. In Kotlin 1.1, it will be enough to checkp.returnType.classifier == Int::class
.
If You need to get property getter/setter, there is a couple of built-in constructions for it YourClass::propertyName
have a look at example bellow
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val myObject = Cat("Tom", 3, 35)
println(Cat::age.getter.call(myObject)) // will print 3
Cat::age.setter.call(myObject, 45)
print(myObject) // will print Cat(name=Tom, age=45, height=35)
}
data class Cat(var name : String, var age : Int, val height : Int)
but sometimes you don't know class exactly(working with generics) or need to get list of properties, then use val <T : Any> KClass<T>.declaredMemberProperties: Collection<KProperty1<T, *>>
it will return all properties, some of them can be mutable(var) and some immutable(val), you can find out immutability by checking belonging to KMutableProperty<*>
(by filtering with is
operator or using convenience methods such as filterIsInstance<KMutableProperty<*>>
)
about your code snippet
I absolutely agree with hotkey, but now it is better to use myObject::class.declaredMemberProperties
instead of myObject.javaClass.kotlin.memberProperties
because the second one is deprecated
https://kotlinlang.org/api/latest/jvm/stdlib/kotlin.jvm/java-class.html
data class Cat(var name : String, var age : Int, val height : Int)
@JvmStatic
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val myObject = Cat("Tom", 3, 35)
val properties = myObject::class.declaredMemberProperties
for (p in properties.filterIsInstance<KMutableProperty<*>>()) {
val data = when (p.returnType.javaType) {
Int::class.javaPrimitiveType,
Int::class.javaObjectType -> 5
String::class.java -> "Rob"
else -> null
}
if (data != null)
p.setter.call(myObject, data)
}
println(myObject)
// it will print Cat(name=Rob, age=5, height=35),
// because height isn't var(immutable)
}
in general, I would approach similar problems with such construction in mind
val myObject = Cat("Tom", 3, 35)
Cat::class.declaredMemberProperties
//if we want only public ones
.filter{ it.visibility == KVisibility.PUBLIC }
// We only want strings
.filter{ it.returnType.isSubtypeOf(String::class.starProjectedType) }
.filterIsInstance<KMutableProperty<*>>()
.forEach { prop ->
prop.setter.call(myObject, "Rob")
}
println(myObject)
//it will print Cat(name=Rob, age=3, height=35),
//because name is only eligible in this case