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I'm using the CheckStyle plugin for Eclipse.
It's great at finding things I didn't intend 99% of the time, but the 1% of the time I actually did intend to knowingly violate a rule, I would like to let CheckStyle know it need not concern itself with flagging a warning.
Example: the Missing a Javadoc comment rule. Most of the time I want Javadoc comments on my methods. However, a method such as:
public boolean isValid() {
return valid;
}
can probably get by without one.
Is there anything like the @SuppressWarnings
annotation which can be used to flag a specific CheckStyle rule violation as acceptable? Some sort of specially formatted comment, maybe? I don't want to disable the rule, I just want to ignore a specific violation.
(I realize in this case I could just write the Javadoc comment, but in other cases fixing the rule violation isn't so simple).
Seems pretty tedious but there needs to be explicit XML configuration to ignore it. You can probably find a GUI to do it via using the Checkstyle plugin for Eclipse or Netbeans. The example I've found is on the Checkstyle configuration page.
Synthesis pointed to the Checkstyle configuration page. Skimming it, I found
SuppressWithNearbyCommentFilter
which seems promising, unless I misunderstood its purpose...PhiLho is right - SuppressWithNearbyCommentFilter or SuppressionCommentFilter can help. I have SuppressionCommentFilter configured and adding the comments "CHECKSTYLE:OFF" and "CHECKSTYLE:ON" will disable check style temporarily.