@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Target(value=ANNOTATION_TYPE)
@Documented
public @interface Stereotype
Specifies that an annotation type is a stereotype.
In many systems, use of architectural patterns produces a set of recurring bean roles. A stereotype allows a framework developer to identify such a role and declare some common metadata for beans with that role in a central place.
A bean may declare zero, one or multiple stereotypes, by applying the stereotype annotation to the bean class or producer method or field.
A stereotype encapsulates any combination of:
The default scope of a stereotype is defined by annotating the stereotype with a scope type. A stereotype may declare at most one scope. If a bean explicitly declares a scope, any default scopes declared by its stereotypes are ignored.
@RequestScoped @Stereotype @Target(TYPE) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface Action { }
The interceptor bindings of a stereotype are defined by annotating the stereotype with the interceptor binding types. A stereotype may declare zero, one or multiple interceptor bindings. An interceptor binding declared by a stereotype is inherited by any bean that declares that stereotype.
@RequestScoped @Secure @Transactional @Stereotype @Target(TYPE) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface Action { }
A stereotype may also specify that:
A stereotype may declare an empty @Named
annotation, which specifies that every bean with the
stereotype has a defaulted name when a name is not explicitly specified by the bean.
@RequestScoped @Named @Secure @Transactional @Stereotype @Target(TYPE) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface Action { }
A stereotype may declare an @Alternative
annotation, which specifies that
every bean with the stereotype is an alternative.
@Alternative @Stereotype @Target(TYPE) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface Mock { }
A stereotype may declare other stereotypes. Stereotype declarations are transitive. A stereotype declared by a second stereotype is inherited by all beans and other stereotypes that declare the second stereotype.
the built-in stereotype @Model