Deprecation should be marked with both the @Deprecated
annotation and @deprecated Javadoc tag. The annotation enables tools such as
IDEs to warn about referencing deprecated elements, and the tag can be used to explain when it was deprecated, why, and how references should be
refactored.
Noncompliant code example
class MyClass {
@Deprecated
public void foo1() { // Noncompliant: Add the missing @deprecated Javadoc tag.
}
/**
* @deprecated
*/
public void foo2() { // Noncompliant: Add the missing @Deprecated annotation.
}
}
Compliant solution
class MyClass {
/**
* @deprecated (when, why, refactoring advice...)
*/
@Deprecated
public void foo1() {
}
}
Exceptions
The members and methods of a deprecated class or interface are ignored by this rule. The classes and interfaces themselves are still subject to
it.
/**
* @deprecated (when, why, etc...)
*/
@Deprecated
class Qix {
public void foo() {} // Compliant; class is deprecated
}
/**
* @deprecated (when, why, etc...)
*/
@Deprecated
interface Plop {
void bar();
}