In Linked bindings, Guice maps a type to its implementation. In example discussed below, we have mapped SpellChecker interface with its implementation SpellCheckerImpl.
bind(SpellChecker.class).to(SpellCheckerImpl.class);
We can also mapped the concrete class to its subclass. See the example below −
bind(SpellCheckerImpl.class).to(WinWordSpellCheckerImpl.class);
Observe that here we have chained the bindings. Let us see the result in complete example.
Create a java class named GuiceTester.
GuiceTester.java
import com.google.inject.AbstractModule; import com.google.inject.Guice; import com.google.inject.Inject; import com.google.inject.Injector; public class GuiceTester { public static void main(String[] args) { Injector injector = Guice.createInjector(new TextEditorModule()); TextEditor editor = injector.getInstance(TextEditor.class); editor.makeSpellCheck(); } } class TextEditor { private SpellChecker spellChecker; @Inject public TextEditor(SpellChecker spellChecker) { this.spellChecker = spellChecker; } public void makeSpellCheck() { spellChecker.checkSpelling(); } } //Binding Module class TextEditorModule extends AbstractModule { @Override protected void configure() { bind(SpellChecker.class).to(SpellCheckerImpl.class); bind(SpellCheckerImpl.class).to(WinWordSpellCheckerImpl.class); } } //spell checker interface interface SpellChecker { public void checkSpelling(); } //spell checker implementation class SpellCheckerImpl implements SpellChecker { @Override public void checkSpelling() { System.out.println("Inside checkSpelling." ); } } //subclass of SpellCheckerImpl class WinWordSpellCheckerImpl extends SpellCheckerImpl { @Override public void checkSpelling() { System.out.println("Inside WinWordSpellCheckerImpl.checkSpelling." ); } }
Compile and run the file, you will see the following output.
Inside WinWordSpellCheckerImpl.checkSpelling.