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java - How to get the line number of a method?

Is it possible to get the line number of an method using reflection or other magic?
It is possible if the method is inside the current Stacktrace. Using Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace(), one can get the line number of an StackTraceElement. But what can I do if I only got the java.lang.reflect.Method Object?

I found this, for classes-> How to get source file-name/line-number from a java.lang.Class object but it's not useful for methods.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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I wanted to do the same thing and after some research settled on javassist. You will need to add javassist (I used version 3.15.0-GA).

Given the following class determine the location of the "x" method. The method name "x" is hard coded however if you are in the same boat as me, the reflection isn't hard so I'm confident you can get a list of method names, then the following will let you get the line numbers of the methods:

public class Widget {
    void x(){System.out.println("I'm x
");}
    //comment added to create space
    void y(){System.out.println("I'm y
");} 
}

import javassist.ClassPool;
import javassist.CtClass;
import javassist.CtMethod;
import javassist.NotFoundException;

public class App {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws NotFoundException {
        System.out.println("Get method line number with javassist
");
        ClassPool pool = ClassPool.getDefault();
        CtClass cc = pool.get("com.quaternion.demo.Widget");
        CtMethod methodX = cc.getDeclaredMethod("x");
        int xlineNumber = methodX.getMethodInfo().getLineNumber(0);
        System.out.println("method x is on line " + xlineNumber + "
");
    }
}

Output: method x is on line 12 which in my case is accurate I cut out some comments...

Note: As mentioned by Pete83 in the comments, this method actually returns the first line of code in the method and not the line which declares the method. This usually won't be an issue as most will probably want to establish relative position (the order in which they were declared) and use this information for your own conventions. This would come up any time you felt the need to include an ordinal value within an annotation which could be readily determined by the position within the code itself.


For quick reference Maven coordinates for javassist:
<dependency>
   <groupId>org.javassist</groupId> <!-- if a version prior to 3.13.0-GA is needed use "javassist" and not "org.javassist" -->
   <artifactId>javassist</artifactId>
   <version>3.15.0-GA</version>
</dependency>

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