Lombok Visual Studio Code



Visual Studio Code is an ideal lightweight development environment for Spring Boot application developers and there are several useful VS Code extensions including:

If you run into any issues when using the features below, you can contact us by clicking the Report an issue button below.

Prerequisites

  1. To install, launch VS Code and from the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)), search for vscode-spring-initializr. Once you have the extension installed, open the Command Palette ( ⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P ) ) and type Spring Initializr to start generating a Maven or Gradle project and then follow the wizard.
  2. A lightweight extension to support Lombok annotations processing in Visual Studio Code. VS Code (version 1.21.0 or later) Lombok added as a dependency in your Java Project (Make sure you're using the latest version to avoid issues!) Add with Maven or Add with Gradle; Install. Open VS Code and press Ctrl + Shift + X to.

The features that Visual Studio Code includes out-of-the-box are just the start. VS Code extensions let you add languages, debuggers, and tools to your installation to support your development workflow. VS Code's rich extensibility model lets extension authors plug directly into the VS Code UI and contribute functionality through the same APIs.

A working Java environment with essential extensions installed is needed, including:

Lombok Visual Studio Code
  • Java Development Kit (JDK), version 11 or later.
  • Apache Maven, version 3.0 or later.
Visual studio code java lombok

For more details, please refer to Java Tutorial

Note: More information about JDK can be found at supported Java versions.

Create the project

The Spring Initializr extension allows you to search for dependencies and generate new Spring Boot projects.

To install, launch VS Code and from the Extensions view (⇧⌘X (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+X)), search for vscode-spring-initializr.

Once you have the extension installed, open the Command Palette (⇧⌘P (Windows, Linux Ctrl+Shift+P)) and type Spring Initializr to start generating a Maven or Gradle project and then follow the wizard.

Edit the project

The Spring Initializr extension allows you to edit dependencies after generating a new Spring Boot project.

Code

Visual Studio Code Lombok Not Working

Navigate to your pom.xml file and right-click to select Edit starters. The Command Palette will show the dependencies you already have beginning with a . You can search for other dependencies you want to add to your project. Or you can click on the existing dependencies to remove them.

Develop the application

The Spring Boot Tools extension includes rich language support for working with Spring Boot application.properties, application.yml, and .java files.

The extension supports quick navigate through source code, smart code completions, quick access to running apps, live application information, and code templates. Similar code completion and validation features are also available for .properties and .yml files.

Run the application

In addition to click F5 to run your application, there's another convenient extension Spring Boot Dashboard with which you can view and manage all available Spring Boot projects in your workspace as well as quickly start, stop, or debug your project.

Next steps

  • To deploy your web app, see the Deploy a Java Application to Azure tutorial.
  • To containerize a web app and deploy as a Docker container, check out the Working with Docker.
  • To learn more about Java Debugging features, see Java Debugging Tutorial.

Overview

@SneakyThrows can be used to sneakily throw checked exceptions without actually declaring this in your method's throws clause. This somewhat contentious ability should be used carefully, of course. The code generated by lombok will not ignore, wrap, replace, or otherwise modify the thrown checked exception; it simply fakes out the compiler. On the JVM (class file) level, all exceptions, checked or not, can be thrown regardless of the throws clause of your methods, which is why this works.

Common use cases for when you want to opt out of the checked exception mechanism center around 2 situations:

  • A needlessly strict interface, such as Runnable - whatever exception propagates out of your run() method, checked or not, it will be passed to the Thread's unhandled exception handler. Catching a checked exception and wrapping it in some sort of RuntimeException is only obscuring the real cause of the issue.
  • An 'impossible' exception. For example, new String(someByteArray, 'UTF-8'); declares that it can throw an UnsupportedEncodingException but according to the JVM specification, UTF-8 must always be available. An UnsupportedEncodingException here is about as likely as a ClassNotFoundError when you use a String object, and you don't catch those either!

Being constrained by needlessly strict interfaces is particularly common when using lambda syntax (arg -> action); however, lambdas cannot be annotated, which means it is not so easy to use @SneakyThrows in combination with lambdas.

Lombok

Be aware that it is impossible to catch sneakily thrown checked types directly, as javac will not let you write a catch block for an exception type that no method call in the try body declares as thrown. This problem is not relevant in either of the use cases listed above, so let this serve as a warning that you should not use the @SneakyThrows mechanism without some deliberation!

Visual Studio Code Java Lombok

You can pass any number of exceptions to the @SneakyThrows annotation. If you pass no exceptions, you may throw any exception sneakily.