Spring autowire=“byType” with Java Config?












0















I can autowire by type and by name in the XML config in the following manner



<bean name="employee1" class="com.Class1" autowire="byName">
<bean name="employee2" class="com.Class2" autowire="byType">


But how can I accomplish the same in Java config? I mean, what is Java Config equivalent of autowire="byName" and by autowire="byType" attributes?



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

//How to configure beans here, like above?

}


The following code is not working



    @Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Thanks in advance!










share|improve this question

























  • Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

    – soorapadman
    Nov 21 '18 at 7:18
















0















I can autowire by type and by name in the XML config in the following manner



<bean name="employee1" class="com.Class1" autowire="byName">
<bean name="employee2" class="com.Class2" autowire="byType">


But how can I accomplish the same in Java config? I mean, what is Java Config equivalent of autowire="byName" and by autowire="byType" attributes?



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

//How to configure beans here, like above?

}


The following code is not working



    @Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Thanks in advance!










share|improve this question

























  • Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

    – soorapadman
    Nov 21 '18 at 7:18














0












0








0








I can autowire by type and by name in the XML config in the following manner



<bean name="employee1" class="com.Class1" autowire="byName">
<bean name="employee2" class="com.Class2" autowire="byType">


But how can I accomplish the same in Java config? I mean, what is Java Config equivalent of autowire="byName" and by autowire="byType" attributes?



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

//How to configure beans here, like above?

}


The following code is not working



    @Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Thanks in advance!










share|improve this question
















I can autowire by type and by name in the XML config in the following manner



<bean name="employee1" class="com.Class1" autowire="byName">
<bean name="employee2" class="com.Class2" autowire="byType">


But how can I accomplish the same in Java config? I mean, what is Java Config equivalent of autowire="byName" and by autowire="byType" attributes?



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

//How to configure beans here, like above?

}


The following code is not working



    @Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Thanks in advance!







spring spring-framework-beans






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 21 '18 at 10:46







rakesh mehra

















asked Nov 20 '18 at 19:11









rakesh mehrarakesh mehra

63




63













  • Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

    – soorapadman
    Nov 21 '18 at 7:18



















  • Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

    – soorapadman
    Nov 21 '18 at 7:18

















Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

– soorapadman
Nov 21 '18 at 7:18





Please look at this link journaldev.com/2623/spring-autowired-annotation

– soorapadman
Nov 21 '18 at 7:18












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














When you just autowire via @Autowired annotation - it means autowiring by type.



If we want to autowire by name we need to use @Autowired and @Qualifier annotation together.



Example:



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

@Bean
@Qualifier("stackoverflow")
public Company company(){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee2(@Autowired @Qualifier("stackoverflow") Company company){
}

}


Updated: Also you can use parameter of @Bean annotation:



@Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean(autowire = Autowire.BY_NAME)
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Please see additional information here






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:47













  • @rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

    – statut
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:52











  • But it's deprecated

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 11:11











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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oldest

votes









0














When you just autowire via @Autowired annotation - it means autowiring by type.



If we want to autowire by name we need to use @Autowired and @Qualifier annotation together.



Example:



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

@Bean
@Qualifier("stackoverflow")
public Company company(){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee2(@Autowired @Qualifier("stackoverflow") Company company){
}

}


Updated: Also you can use parameter of @Bean annotation:



@Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean(autowire = Autowire.BY_NAME)
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Please see additional information here






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:47













  • @rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

    – statut
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:52











  • But it's deprecated

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 11:11
















0














When you just autowire via @Autowired annotation - it means autowiring by type.



If we want to autowire by name we need to use @Autowired and @Qualifier annotation together.



Example:



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

@Bean
@Qualifier("stackoverflow")
public Company company(){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee2(@Autowired @Qualifier("stackoverflow") Company company){
}

}


Updated: Also you can use parameter of @Bean annotation:



@Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean(autowire = Autowire.BY_NAME)
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Please see additional information here






share|improve this answer


























  • Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:47













  • @rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

    – statut
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:52











  • But it's deprecated

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 11:11














0












0








0







When you just autowire via @Autowired annotation - it means autowiring by type.



If we want to autowire by name we need to use @Autowired and @Qualifier annotation together.



Example:



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

@Bean
@Qualifier("stackoverflow")
public Company company(){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee2(@Autowired @Qualifier("stackoverflow") Company company){
}

}


Updated: Also you can use parameter of @Bean annotation:



@Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean(autowire = Autowire.BY_NAME)
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Please see additional information here






share|improve this answer















When you just autowire via @Autowired annotation - it means autowiring by type.



If we want to autowire by name we need to use @Autowired and @Qualifier annotation together.



Example:



@Configuration
public class JavaConfig {

@Bean
@Qualifier("stackoverflow")
public Company company(){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
}

@Bean
public Employee employee2(@Autowired @Qualifier("stackoverflow") Company company){
}

}


Updated: Also you can use parameter of @Bean annotation:



@Bean
public Company company(){
return new Company();
}

@Bean(autowire = Autowire.BY_NAME)
public Employee employee1(@Autowired Company company){
return new Employee();
}


Please see additional information here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 21 '18 at 10:52

























answered Nov 21 '18 at 8:14









statutstatut

671412




671412













  • Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:47













  • @rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

    – statut
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:52











  • But it's deprecated

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 11:11



















  • Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:47













  • @rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

    – statut
    Nov 21 '18 at 10:52











  • But it's deprecated

    – rakesh mehra
    Nov 21 '18 at 11:11

















Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

– rakesh mehra
Nov 21 '18 at 10:47







Thanks for the answer. I have added some additional info in my question, with sample code (Based on what you suggested). It is still not working. Also, the link you shared doesn't talk about @autowire in Java config file.

– rakesh mehra
Nov 21 '18 at 10:47















@rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

– statut
Nov 21 '18 at 10:52





@rakeshmehra I updated the answer, please see

– statut
Nov 21 '18 at 10:52













But it's deprecated

– rakesh mehra
Nov 21 '18 at 11:11





But it's deprecated

– rakesh mehra
Nov 21 '18 at 11:11




















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