public interface Scope
Injector has no scope, meaning it has no state from the
framework's perspective -- the Injector creates it, injects it once into the class that
required it, and then immediately forgets it. Associating a scope with a particular binding
allows the created instance to be "remembered" and possibly used again for other injections.
An example of a scope is Scopes.SINGLETON.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
<T> Provider<T> |
scope(Key<T> key,
Provider<T> unscoped)
Scopes a provider.
|
java.lang.String |
toString()
A short but useful description of this scope.
|
<T> Provider<T> scope(Key<T> key, Provider<T> unscoped)
Scope implementations are strongly encouraged to override Object.toString() in the
returned provider and include the backing provider's toString() output.
key - binding keyunscoped - locates an instance when one doesn't already exist in this scope.java.lang.String toString()
"Scopes.SINGLETON", "ServletScopes.SESSION" and
"ServletScopes.REQUEST".toString in class java.lang.Object