Issue
In Kotlin you can create a data class
:
data class CountriesResponse(
val count: Int,
val countries: List<Country>,
val error: String)
Then you can use it to parse a JSON, for instance, "{n: 10}". In this case you will have an object val countries: CountriesResponse
, received from Retrofit
, Fuel
or Gson
, that contains these values: count = 0, countries = null, error = null
.
In Kotlin + Gson - How to get an emptyList when null for data class you can see another example.
When you later try to use countries
, you will get an exception here: val size = countries.countries.size
: "kotlin.TypeCastException: null cannot be cast to non-null type kotlin.Int". If you write a code and use ?
when accessing these fields, Android Studio will highlight ?.
and warn: Unnecessary safe call on a non-null receiver of type List<Country>
.
So, should we use ?
in data classes? Why can an application set null
to non-nullable variables during runtime?
Solution
This happens because Gson uses an unsafe (as in java.misc.Unsafe
) instance construction mechanism to create instances of classes, bypassing their constructors, and then sets their fields directly.
See this Q&A for some research: Gson Deserialization with Kotlin, Initializer block not called.
As a consequence, Gson ignores both the construction logic and the class state invariants, so it is not recommended to use it for complex classes which may be affected by this. It ignores the value checks in the setters as well.
Consider a Kotlin-aware serialization solution, such as Jackson (mentioned in the Q&A linked above) or kotlinx.serialization
.
Answered By - hotkey
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