Annotation Interface TerminatesExecution
TerminatesExecution
is a method annotation that indicates that a method terminates the
execution of the program. This can be used to annotate methods such as System.exit()
, or
methods that unconditionally throw an exception.
The annotation enables flow-sensitive type refinement to be more precise. For example, after
if (x == null) { System.err.println("Bad value supplied"); System.exit(1); }the Nullness Checker can determine that
x
is non-null.
The annotation is a trusted annotation, meaning that it is not checked whether the annotated method really does terminate the program.
This annotation is inherited by subtypes, just as if it were meta-annotated with
@InheritedAnnotation
.
The Checker Framework recognizes this annotation, but the Java compiler javac
does
not. After calling a method annotated with TerminatesExecution
, to prevent a
javac
diagnostic, you generally need to insert a throw
statement (which you know will
never execute):
... myTerminatingMethod(); throw new Error("unreachable");
- See the Checker Framework Manual:
- Automatic type refinement (flow-sensitive type
qualifier inference)