I am trying to invoke this method in Java reflectively:
public void setFoo(ArrayList<String> foo) { this.foo = foo; }
The problem is that I want to pass null as null
, so that foo becomes null.
However, in the following approach it assumes that there are no arguments, and I get IllegalArgumentException
(wrong number of arguments
):
method.invoke(new FooHolder(), null);
// -----------------------------^ - I want null to be passed to the method...
How is this accomplished?
Try
method.invoke(new FooHolder(), new Object[]{ null });
The compiler warning should make you aware of the problem;
The argument of type null should explicitly be cast to Object[] for
the invocation of the varargs method invoke(Object, Object...) from
type Method. It could alternatively be cast to Object for a varargs
invocation
You can fix it like this;
Object arg = null;
method.invoke(new FooHolder(), arg);
For me, this DOES NOT work:
m.invoke ( c.newInstance() , new Object[] { null } );
BUT this works:
m.invoke ( c.newInstance() , new Object[] { } );
A bit of an explanation to the solutions already posted.
Method.invoke()
is declared as a variable arity function, and that means that normally you don't need to explicitly create an object array. Only because you pass a single parameter, which could be interpreted as an object array itself, does method.invoke( obj, null)
fail.
If for example your method had two parameters, method.invoke( obj, null, null)
would work perfectly fine.
However if your method has a single Object[]
parameter, you always have to wrap it.