Annotation Interface AnnotatedFor
@Documented
@Retention(SOURCE)
@Target({TYPE,METHOD,CONSTRUCTOR,PACKAGE})
public @interface AnnotatedFor
Indicates that this class has been annotated for the given type system. For example,
 
@AnnotatedFor({"nullness", "regex"}) indicates that the class has been annotated with
 annotations such as @Nullable and @Regex. The argument to AnnotatedFor is
 not an annotation name, but a checker name.
 You should only use this annotation in a partially-annotated library. There is no point to using it in a fully-annotated library nor in an application that does not export APIs for clients.
This annotation has no effect unless the 
 -AuseConservativeDefaultsForUncheckedCode=source command-line argument is supplied. Ordinarily,
 the -AuseConservativeDefaultsForUncheckedCode=source command-line argument causes
 unannotated locations to be defaulted using conservative defaults, and it suppresses all
 warnings. However, a class with a relevant @AnnotatedFor annotation is always defaulted
 normally (typically using the CLIMB-to-top rule), and typechecking warnings are issued.
- See the Checker Framework Manual:
 - Compiling partially-annotated libraries
 
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Required Element Summary
Required Elements 
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Element Details
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value
String[] valueReturns the type systems for which the class has been annotated. Legal arguments are any string that may be passed to the-processorcommand-line argument: the fully-qualified class name for the checker, or a shorthand for built-in checkers. Using the annotation with no arguments, as in@AnnotatedFor({}), has no effect.- Returns:
 - the type systems for which the class has been annotated
 - See the Checker Framework Manual:
 - Short names for built-in checkers
 
 
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