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/* __ *\
** ________ ___ / / ___ Scala API **
** / __/ __// _ | / / / _ | (c) 2002-2010, LAMP/EPFL **
** __\ \/ /__/ __ |/ /__/ __ | http://scala-lang.org/ **
** /____/\___/_/ |_/____/_/ | | **
** |/ **
\* */
package scala.annotation.target
/**
* For every field of a class, the Scala compiler generates up to four
* synthetic accessors: getter, setter, bean getter and bean setter.
* The meta-annotations in package {{{scala.annotation.target}}} are
* used to control to which of the above members the annotations on
* the field are copied. By default, field annotations are only added
* to the actual field, but not to any of the accessors. By annotating
* the annotation type or the annotation class with one or several of
* the meta-annotations this behavior can be changed.
*
* In the following example, the annotation {{{@Id}}} will be added
* only to the bean getter {{{getX}}}. In order to annotate the field
* as well, the meta-annotation {{{@field}}} would need to be added.
*
* {{{
* import javax.persistence.Id
* class A {
* @(Id @beanGetter) @BeanProperty val x = 0
* }
* }}}
*
* The syntax can be improved using a type alias:
*
* {{{
* object ScalaJPA {
* type Id = javax.persistence.Id @beanGetter
* }
* import ScalaJPA.Id
* class A {
* @Id @BeanProperty val x = 0
* }
* }}}
*
* For annotations defined in Scala, a default target can be specified
* in the annotation class itself, for example
*
* {{{
* @getter
* class myAnnotation extends Annotation
* }}}
*/
final class param extends StaticAnnotation
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