Beginner's Guide to Spring Expression Language With Spring Boot
Spring into action with SpEL!
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Join For FreeSpring Expression Language (SpEL) is a powerful expression language, which can be used for querying and manipulating an object graph at runtime. SpEL is available via XML or annotations and is evaluated during the bean creation time.
In this article, we will look at some basic examples of SpEL usage in Spring Boot.
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Setting up Spring Boot Application
We will create a simple Spring Boot application and create the employee.properties file in the resources directory.
employee.names=Petey Cruiser,Anna Sthesia,Paul Molive,Buck Kinnear
employee.type=contract,fulltime,external
employee.age={one:'26', two : '34', three : '32', four: '25'}
Create a class EmployeeConfig
as follows:
package com.techshard.spel;
import org.springframework.boot.context.properties.ConfigurationProperties;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.PropertySource;
@Configuration
@PropertySource (name = "employeeProperties", value = "employee.properties")
@ConfigurationProperties
public class EmployeeConfig {
}
Reading Configuration Using SpEL and @Value Annotation
We will add some fields to read the configuration from employee.properties using @Value
annotation. The @Value
annotation can be used for injecting values into fields in Spring-managed beans, and it can be applied at the field, constructor, or method parameter level.
@Value ("#{'${employee.names}'.split(',')}")
private List<String> employeeNames;
Here, we are using Spring expression language to get a list of employee names. We can manipulate the properties to get the list of values. The field employeeNames
will give a list: [Petey Cruiser, Anna Sthesia, Paul Molive, Buck Kinnear].
Suppose we want to get only first entry from a list of employee names; we can write the expression as follows:
@Value ("#{'${employee.names}'.split(',')[0]}")
private String firstEmployeeName;
This will get the first name from the list: Petey Cruiser.
Let us now look at how to use @Value
with Map
s. We have the following property defined.
employee.age={one:'26', two : '34', three : '32', four: '25'}
We can inject the above the property value as a Map
as follows:
@Value ("#{${employee.age}}")
private Map<String, Integer> employeeAge;
Suppose we want to get the value using certain key; we can get the value as follows:
@Value ("#{${employee.age}.two}")
private String employeeAgeTwo;
If we are not sure if a certain key exists and we want to get a default value, then we could write the expression as follows:
@Value ("#{${employee.age}['five'] ?: 30}")
private Integer ageWithDefaultValue;
This would give the value as 30 if the key 'five' does not exist.
Reading System Properties Using @Value Annotation
We can also inject system properties using SpEL. For example, Java home can be injected as follows:
@Value ("#{systemProperties['java.home']}")
private String javaHome;
Similarly, the user directory can be injected as below:
@Value ("#{systemProperties['user.dir']}")
private String userDir;
Wrapping Up
In this article, we looked at various possibilities of using SpEL with the @Value
annotation. If you wish to learn more about Spring Expression Language, read the Spring documentation here.
A complete example can be found on this GitHub repository.
Further Reading
Published at DZone with permission of Swathi Prasad, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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