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Spring Java Format

What is This?

A set of plugins that can be applied to any Java project to provide a consistent “Spring” style. The set currently consists of:

  • A source formatter that applies wrapping and whitespace conventions

  • A checkstyle plugin that enforces consistency across a codebase

Since the aim of this project is to provide consistency, each plugin is not generally configurable. You need to change your code to match the required conventions. You can’t configure the plugin conventions to match your style!

Maven

Source Formatting

For source formatting, add the spring-javaformat-maven-plugin to your build plugins as follows:

<build>
	<plugins>
		<plugin>
			<groupId>io.spring.javaformat</groupId>
			<artifactId>spring-javaformat-maven-plugin</artifactId>
			<version>0.0.39</version>
		</plugin>
	</plugins>
</build>

And the io.spring.javaformat plugin group in ~/.m2/settings.xml as follows:

<pluginGroups>
	<pluginGroup>io.spring.javaformat</pluginGroup>
</pluginGroups>

You can now run ./mvnw spring-javaformat:apply to reformat code.

If you want to enforce that all code matches the required style, add the following:

<build>
	<plugins>
		<plugin>
			<groupId>io.spring.javaformat</groupId>
			<artifactId>spring-javaformat-maven-plugin</artifactId>
			<version>0.0.39</version>
			<executions>
				<execution>
					<phase>validate</phase>
					<inherited>true</inherited>
					<goals>
						<goal>validate</goal>
					</goals>
				</execution>
			</executions>
		</plugin>
	</plugins>
</build>
Note
The source formatter does not fundamentally change your code. For example, it will not change the order of import statements. It is effectively limited to adding or removing whitespace and line feeds.
Tip
You can use -Dspring-javaformat.validate.skip=true or -Dspring-javaformat.apply.skip=true command line arguments to temporarily skip the validation or format goals. If you want to skip both, you can use -Dspring-javaformat.skip=true.

Checkstyle

To enforce checksyle conventions add the checkstyle plugin and include a dependency on spring-javaformat-checkstyle:

<build>
	<plugins>
		<plugin>
			<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
			<artifactId>maven-checkstyle-plugin</artifactId>
			<version>3.1.1</version>
			<dependencies>
				<dependency>
					<groupId>com.puppycrawl.tools</groupId>
					<artifactId>checkstyle</artifactId>
					<version>9.3</version>
				</dependency>
				<dependency>
					<groupId>io.spring.javaformat</groupId>
					<artifactId>spring-javaformat-checkstyle</artifactId>
					<version>0.0.39</version>
				</dependency>
			</dependencies>
			<executions>
				<execution>
					<id>checkstyle-validation</id>
					<phase>validate</phase>
					<inherited>true</inherited>
					<configuration>
						<configLocation>io/spring/javaformat/checkstyle/checkstyle.xml</configLocation>
						<includeTestSourceDirectory>true</includeTestSourceDirectory>
					</configuration>
					<goals>
						<goal>check</goal>
					</goals>
				</execution>
			</executions>
		</plugin>
	</plugins>
</build>

Gradle

Source Formatting

For source formatting, add the spring-javaformat-gradle-plugin to your build plugins as follows:

buildscript {
	repositories {
		mavenCentral()
	}
	dependencies {
		classpath("io.spring.javaformat:spring-javaformat-gradle-plugin:0.0.39")
	}
}

apply plugin: 'io.spring.javaformat'

The plugin adds format and checkFormat tasks to your project. The checkFormat task is automatically applied when running the standard Gradle check task.

In case you want to exclude a package from being checked, for example if you generate sources, you can do this by adding following configuration:

tasks.withType(io.spring.javaformat.gradle.tasks.CheckFormat) {
    exclude "package/to/exclude"
}

Checkstyle

To enforce checksyle conventions add the checkstyle plugin and include a dependency on spring-javaformat-checkstyle:

apply plugin: 'checkstyle'

checkstyle {
	toolVersion = "9.3"
}

dependencies {
	checkstyle("io.spring.javaformat:spring-javaformat-checkstyle:0.0.39")
}

Your checkstyle.xml file should look then like this:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE module PUBLIC
		"-//Checkstyle//DTD Checkstyle Configuration 1.3//EN"
		"https://checkstyle.org/dtds/configuration_1_3.dtd">
<module name="com.puppycrawl.tools.checkstyle.Checker">
	<module name="io.spring.javaformat.checkstyle.SpringChecks" />
</module>

Java 8 Support

By default, the formatter requires Java 11. If you are working on an older project, you can use a variation of the formatter based off Eclipse 2021-03 (the latest Eclipse JDT version built with Java 8).

To use the Java 8 version, add a file called .springjavaformatconfig to the root of your project with the following content:

java-baseline=8

Eclipse

The Eclipse plugin provides a custom formatter implementation and automatically applies project specific settings. The plugin is automatically activated whenever the Maven or Gradle plugins are discovered in a project build script.

If you need to customize the project specific settings that the plugin applies you should add a .eclipse folder in the root of your project. All .prefs files from this folder will be copied to the project .settings folders. Usually you’ll provide your own org.eclipse.jdt.core.prefs and org.eclipse.jdt.ui.prefs files.

You can also add a .eclipse/eclipse.properties file to customize the following items:

copyright-year= # The copyright year to use in new files

To install the plugin use the io.spring.javaformat.eclipse.site zip file. You can download the latest version from Maven Central or use the update site.

IntelliJ IDEA

The IntelliJ IDEA plugin provides custom formatter support for IntelliJ IDEA. The plugin is automatically activated whenever the Maven or Gradle plugins are discovered in a project build script or if a .springjavaformatconfig file. A Spring Java Format icon (formatOn) will also be displayed in the status bar to indicate the formatter is active. You can use the standard codereformat code action to format the code.

To install the plugin use the spring-javaformat-intellij-idea-plugin jar file. You can download the latest version from Maven Central.

Enable the Plugin

The plugin is automatically enabled when one or more of the following conditions match:

  • .springjavaformatconfig file exists

  • For a Maven-based project, spring-javaformat-maven-plugin plugin is defined in pom.xml

  • For a Gradle-based project, io.spring.javaformat plugin is applied

CheckStyle-IDEA plugin

The CheckStyle-IDEA plugin provides Checkstyle integration for IntelliJ IDEA.

To configure the plugin, create your own Checkstyle configuration file with the following content:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE module PUBLIC
		"-//Checkstyle//DTD Checkstyle Configuration 1.3//EN"
		"https://checkstyle.org/dtds/configuration_1_3.dtd">
<module name="com.puppycrawl.tools.checkstyle.Checker">
	<module name="io.spring.javaformat.checkstyle.SpringChecks" />
</module>

Once the configuration file is created, configure your IDE to use it:

  • Download spring-javaformat-checkstyle-0.0.39.jar from Maven Central.

  • Download spring-javaformat-config-0.0.39.jar from Maven Central.

  • Open Preferences - Tools - Checkstyle

  • Add spring-javaformat-checkstyle-0.0.39.jar and spring-javaformat-config-0.0.39.jar to the Third-Party Checks

  • Specify the appropriate Checkstyle version

  • Add and enable your Checkstyle configuration file

Visual Studio Code

The Visual Studio Code extension provides custom formatter support for Microsoft Visual Studio Code. The extension using the DocumentFormattingEditProvider API. Once installed it may be activated by using the “Format Document” action available in the editor context menu or from the Command Palette.

To install the extension select “Install from VSIX” in the extensions panel and choose the spring-javaformat-vscode-extension vsix file. You can download the latest version from Maven Central.

About the Conventions

Most of the coding conventions and style comes from the Spring Framework and Spring Boot projects. Spring Framework manually formats code, where as Spring Boot uses automatic formatting.

Indenting With Spaces

By default tabs are used for indenting formatted code. We strongly recommend that this default is not changed, especially for official Spring projects. If, however, you feel that you can’t live with tabs then switching to spaces is the one configuration option that we do support.

To use spaces rather than tabs, add a file called .springjavaformatconfig to the root of your project with the following content:

indentation-style=spaces

Tips

Formatting and Checkstyle alone are not enough to produce truly consistent code. Here are some tips that we’ve found useful when developing Spring Boot.

Excluding Specific Checks

If you want most SpringChecks but need to exclude one or two, you can do something like this in your checkstyle.xml:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE module PUBLIC
		"-//Checkstyle//DTD Checkstyle Configuration 1.3//EN"
		"https://checkstyle.org/dtds/configuration_1_3.dtd">
<module name="com.puppycrawl.tools.checkstyle.Checker">
	<module name="io.spring.javaformat.checkstyle.SpringChecks">
		<property name="excludes" value="io.spring.javaformat.checkstyle.check.SpringAvoidStaticImportCheck" />
	</module>
</module>

Disabling Formatting For Blocks of Code

Some code isn’t particularly amenable to automatic formatting. For example, Spring Security configurations often work better when manually formatted.

If you need to disable formatting for a specific block of code you can enclose it in a @formatter:off / @formatter:on set:

// @formatter:off

... code not be formatted

// @formatter:on

Wrapping

The source formatter uses 120 chars for wrapping. This aims to strike a balance between making use of available horizontal space in your IDE and avoiding unwanted additional wrapping when viewing code on GitHub and the like.

If you’re used to longer lines, 120 chars can take some getting used to. Specifically, if you have many nesting levels things can start to look quite bad. Generally, if you see code bunched up to the right of your screen you should take that as a signal to use the “extract method” refactor. Extracting small private methods will improve formatting and it helps when reading the code and debugging.

Whitespace

Keeping whitespace lines out of method bodies can help make the code easier to scan. If blank lines are only included between methods it becomes easier to see the overall structure of the class. If you find you need whitespace inside your method, consider if extracting a private method might give a better result.

Comments

Try to add javadoc for each public method and constant. Private methods shouldn’t generally need javadoc, unless it provides a natural place to document unusual behavior.

The checkstyle rules will enforce that all public classes have javadoc. They will also ensure that @author tags are well formed.

Final

Private members should be final whenever possible. Local variable and parameters should generally not be explicitly declared as final since it adds so much noise.

Read-down Methods, Fields and Parameters

Methods don’t need to be organized by scope. There’s no need to group all private, protected and public methods together. Instead try to make your code easy to read when scanning the file from top to bottom. In other words, try to have methods only reference method further down in the file. Keep private methods as close to the thing that calls them as possible.

It’s also recommend that you try to keep consistent ordering with fields and constructor parameters. For example:

class Name {

	private final String first;

	private final String last;

	public Name(String first, String last) {
		this.first = first;
		this.last = last;
	}

}

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