Hi,
I would totally agree with Simon there, but surprisingly enough I found this in
the JavaAnnotations Spec:
S.30 1.8.16 @Scope
The following snippet shows a sample for a scoped service interface definition.
@Scope(“CONVERSATION”)
public interface ShoppingCartService {
void addToCart(Item item);
}
Though I think Simon is still right in practical approaches. At least I would
stick to the same rules he outlined in his answer.
Regards
Stefan
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Simon Nash <[email protected]>
Gesendet: 21.03.2010 19:27:31
An: [email protected]
Betreff: Re: Conversational or Conversation Scope
>Antonio Mirarchi wrote:
>> Hi i have some questions about SCA assembly specification and Java
>> annotation.
>> 1) What is the difference betwenn use a Java interface marked with
>> @Conversational annotation and use the same Java interface marked with
>> @Scope("Conversation") ?
> >
>You can't mark a Java interface with @Scope("Conversation"). The @Scope
>annotation is only used for implementation classes.
>
>> 2) If i have a java interface marked with @Conversational annotation the
>> implementation class must be annotated with @Scope("conversation")?
> >
>Not "must be" but "should be". There are some obscure cases where the
>implementation class can be given a different scope such as Composite.
>Although this is legal, I don't think it's very useful.
>
>> 3) What is the difference between annotation @Conversational and
>> annotation @Scope("Conversation")?
>>
>@Conversational is only used on interfaces and @Scope is only used on
>implementation classes.
>
> Simon
>
>> thanks for your answers.
>
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