Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
Our policy is to include @Nullable only when it would appear in the standard
Javadoc:
when the method is public or protected and belongs to a public class.
Have you found missing @Nullable annotations of that sort?
Original comment by jared.l....@gmail.com
on 18 Sep 2009 at 11:26
In fact, the presence and absence of @Nullable in our code has been validated
by
findbugs. Still let us know if you find another problem.
Original comment by kevin...@gmail.com
on 21 Sep 2009 at 5:50
> Our policy is to include @Nullable only when it would appear in the
> standard Javadoc: when the method is public or protected and belongs to
> a public class.
Is there any place where this decision is documented? Absent any
documentation, the inconsistency from class to class is confusing.
Also, can you explain the reasoning behind this? As far as I can tell, it
would not hurt to add annotations to private classes and methods. While
they might not appear in the Javadoc, they serve as useful documentation.
Original comment by mala...@gmail.com
on 16 Nov 2009 at 5:11
The "reasoning" is trivial: we added what was necessary to make findbugs
happy. In
the future it looks like we may be moving to the JSR-308 checker framework,
which is
more powerful but seems to perhaps have subtle differences. And when we do
that, we'll
add or change what's necessary to make it happy. As long as the tools support
the
correct application of these things, it's something we can keep working
correctly, but
beyond that, it's not worth our extensive time and thought to think everything
over
across the whole library.
Original comment by kevin...@gmail.com
on 16 Nov 2009 at 5:19
Private methods and classes make up a large portion of the code base which is
just as
likely to contain bugs. It seems undesirable to leave such a part of your code
base unannotated, and therefore unchecked.
My patch contains annotations for the private methods of the google
collections,
so applying the patch would not be too burdensome.
If you are considering migrating over to a different system, I could annotate
the
collections with JSR-308 annotations for comparison. Let me know if you want
me
to do this.
I don't think you have addressed my point about documentation of the
annotations.
While a future move to a more documented system may address the problem, the
current annotations are undocumented and confusing. Some potential solutions
are
to add documentation, or to remove them from the code base for the final
release.
A half-solution would be to mark the annotations as undocumented, so they don't
show up in the Javadoc.
Original comment by mala...@gmail.com
on 29 Nov 2009 at 5:51
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
mala...@gmail.com
on 18 Sep 2009 at 11:04Attachments: