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Decorators

Azure.ClientGenerator.Core

@access

Override access for operations, models, enums and model property. When setting access for namespaces, the access info will be propagated to the models and operations defined in the namespace. If the model has an access override, the model override takes precedence. When setting access for an operation, it will influence the access info for models/enums that are used by this operation. Models/enums that are used in any operations with @access(Access.public) will be set to access “public” Models/enums that are only used in operations with @access(Access.internal) will be set to access “internal”. The access info for models will be propagated to models’ properties, parent models, discriminated sub models. The override access should not be narrow than the access calculated by operation, and different override access should not conflict with each other, otherwise a warning will be added to diagnostics list. Model property’s access will default to public unless there is an override.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.access(value: EnumMember, scope?: valueof string)

Target

ModelProperty | Model | Operation | Enum | Union | Namespace

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valueEnumMemberThe access info you want to set for this model or operation.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

Set access
Access.internal
@access(Access.internal)
model ModelToHide {
prop: string;
}
// Access.internal
@access(Access.internal)
op test: void;
Access propagation
Access.internal
@discriminator("kind")
model Fish {
age: int32;
}
// Access.internal
@discriminator("sharktype")
model Shark extends Fish {
kind: "shark";
origin: Origin;
}
// Access.internal
model Salmon extends Fish {
kind: "salmon";
}
// Access.internal
model SawShark extends Shark {
sharktype: "saw";
}
// Access.internal
model Origin {
country: string;
city: string;
manufacture: string;
}
// Access.internal
@get
@access(Access.internal)
op getModel(): Fish;
Access influence from operation
Access.internal
model Test1 {}
// Access.internal
@access(Access.internal)
@route("/func1")
op func1(@body body: Test1): void;
// Access.public
model Test2 {}
// Access.public
@route("/func2")
op func2(@body body: Test2): void;
// Access.public
model Test3 {}
// Access.public
@access(Access.public)
@route("/func3")
op func3(@body body: Test3): void;
// Access.public
model Test4 {}
// Access.internal
@access(Access.internal)
@route("/func4")
op func4(@body body: Test4): void;
// Access.public
@route("/func5")
op func5(@body body: Test4): void;
// Access.public
model Test5 {}
// Access.internal
@access(Access.internal)
@route("/func6")
op func6(@body body: Test5): void;
// Access.public
@route("/func7")
op func7(@body body: Test5): void;
// Access.public
@access(Access.public)
@route("/func8")
op func8(@body body: Test5): void;

@alternateType

Set an alternate type for a model property, Scalar, or function parameter. Note that @encode will be overridden by the one defined in alternate type. When the source type is Scalar, the alternate type must be Scalar.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.alternateType(alternate: unknown, scope?: valueof string)

Target

The source type to which the alternate type will be applied. ModelProperty | Scalar

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
alternateunknownThe alternate type to apply to the target.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

model Foo {
date: utcDateTime;
}
@@alternateType(Foo.date, string);
scalar storageDateTime extends utcDataTime;
@@alternateType(storageDateTime, string, "python");
op test(@param @alternateType(string) date: utcDateTime): void;
model Test {
@alternateType(unknown)
thumbprint?: string;
@alternateType(AzureLocation[], "csharp")
locations: string[];
}

@apiVersion

Use to override default assumptions on whether a parameter is an api-version parameter or not. By default, we do matches with the api-version or apiversion string in the parameter name. Since api versions are a client parameter, we will also elevate this parameter up onto the client.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.apiVersion(value?: valueof boolean, scope?: valueof string)

Target

ModelProperty

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valuevalueof booleanIf true, we will treat this parameter as an api-version parameter. If false, we will not. Default is true.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

namespace Contoso;
op test(
@apiVersion
@header("x-ms-version")
version: string,
): void;

@client

Create a ClientGenerator.Core client out of a namespace or interface

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.client(value?: Model, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Namespace | Interface

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valueModelOptional configuration for the service.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

Basic client setting
@client
namespace MyService {
}
Setting with other service
namespace MyService {
}
@client({
service: MyService,
})
interface MyInterface {}
Changing client name if you don’t want <Interface/Namespace>Client
@client({
client: MySpecialClient,
})
interface MyInterface {}

@clientApiVersions

Specify additional API versions that the client can support. These versions should include those defined by the service’s versioning configuration. This decorator is useful for extending the API version enum exposed by the client. It is particularly beneficial when generating a complete API version enum without requiring the entire specification to be annotated with versioning decorators, as the generation process does not depend on versioning details.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.clientApiVersions(value: Enum, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Namespace

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valueEnum
scopevalueof string

Examples

main.tsp
@versioned(Versions)
namespace Contoso {
enum Versions {
v4,
v5,
}
}
// client.tsp
enum ClientApiVersions {
v1,
v2,
v3,
...Contoso.Versions,
}
@@clientApiVersions(Contoso, ClientApiVersions);

@clientDoc

Override documentation for a type in client libraries. This allows you to provide client-specific documentation that differs from the service-definition documentation.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.clientDoc(documentation: valueof string, mode: EnumMember, scope?: valueof string)

Target

unknown

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
documentationvalueof stringThe client-specific documentation to apply
modeEnumMemberSpecifies how to apply the documentation (append or replace)
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

Replacing documentation
@doc("This is service documentation")
@clientDoc("This is client-specific documentation", DocumentationMode.replace)
op myOperation(): void;
Appending documentation
@doc("This is service documentation.")
@clientDoc("This additional note is for client libraries only.", DocumentationMode.append)
model MyModel {
prop: string;
}
Language-specific documentation
@doc("This is service documentation")
@clientDoc("Python-specific documentation", DocumentationMode.replace, "python")
@clientDoc("JavaScript-specific documentation", DocumentationMode.replace, "javascript")
op myOperation(): void;

@clientInitialization

Customize the client initialization way.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.clientInitialization(options: Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.ClientInitializationOptions, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Namespace | Interface

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
optionsClientInitializationOptions
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

main.tsp
namespace MyService;
op upload(blobName: string): void;
op download(blobName: string): void;
// client.tsp
namespace MyCustomizations;
model MyServiceClientOptions {
blobName: string;
}
@@clientInitialization(MyService, {parameters: MyServiceClientOptions})
// The generated client will have `blobName` on its initialization method. We will also
// elevate the existing `blobName` parameter from method level to client level.

@clientName

Changes the name of a method, parameter, property, or model generated in the client SDK

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.clientName(rename: valueof string, scope?: valueof string)

Target

unknown

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
renamevalueof stringThe rename you want applied to the object
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@clientName("nameInClient")
op nameInService: void;
@clientName("nameForJava", "java")
@clientName("name_for_python", "python")
@clientName("nameForCsharp", "csharp")
@clientName("nameForJavascript", "javascript")
op nameInService: void;

@clientNamespace

Changes the namespace of a client, model, enum or union generated in the client SDK. By default, the client namespace for them will follow the TypeSpec namespace.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.clientNamespace(rename: valueof string, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Namespace | Interface | Model | Enum | Union

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
renamevalueof stringThe rename you want applied to the object
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@clientNamespace("ContosoClient")
namespace Contoso;
@clientNamespace("ContosoJava", "java")
@clientNamespace("ContosoPython", "python")
@clientNamespace("ContosoCSharp", "csharp")
@clientNamespace("ContosoJavascript", "javascript")
namespace Contoso;

@convenientAPI

Whether you want to generate an operation as a convenient operation.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.convenientAPI(value?: valueof boolean, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Operation

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valuevalueof booleanWhether to generate the operation as convenience method or not.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@convenientAPI(false)
op test: void;

@deserializeEmptyStringAsNull

Indicates that a model property of type string or a Scalar type derived from string should be deserialized as null when its value is an empty string ("").

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.deserializeEmptyStringAsNull(scope?: valueof string)

Target

ModelProperty

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

model MyModel {
scalar stringlike extends string;
@deserializeEmptyStringAsNull
prop: string;
@deserializeEmptyStringAsNull
prop: stringlike;
}

@flattenProperty

Set whether a model property should be flattened or not.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.flattenProperty(scope?: valueof string)

Target

ModelProperty

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

model Foo {
@flattenProperty
prop: Bar;
}
model Bar {}

@operationGroup

Create a ClientGenerator.Core operation group out of a namespace or interface

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.operationGroup(scope?: valueof string)

Target

Namespace | Interface

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@operationGroup
interface MyInterface {}

@override

Override the default client method generated by TCGC from your service definition

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.override(override: Operation, scope?: valueof string)

Target

: The original service definition Operation

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
overrideOperation: The override method definition that specifies the exact client method you want
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

main.tsp
namespace MyService;
model Params {
foo: string;
bar: string;
}
op myOperation(...Params): void; // by default, we generate the method signature as `op myOperation(foo: string, bar: string)`;
// client.tsp
namespace MyCustomizations;
op myOperationCustomization(params: MyService.Params): void;
@@override(MyService.myOperation, myOperationCustomization);
// method signature is now `op myOperation(params: Params)`
main.tsp
namespace MyService;
model Params {
foo: string;
bar: string;
}
op myOperation(...Params): void; // by default, we generate the method signature as `op myOperation(foo: string, bar: string)`;
// client.tsp
namespace MyCustomizations;
op myOperationCustomization(params: MyService.Params): void;
@@override(MyService.myOperation, myOperationCustomization, "csharp")
// method signature is now `op myOperation(params: Params)` just for csharp

@paramAlias

Alias the name of a client parameter to a different name. This permits you to have a different name for the parameter in client initialization then on individual methods and still refer to the same parameter.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.paramAlias(paramAlias: valueof string, scope?: valueof string)

Target

ModelProperty

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
paramAliasvalueof string
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

main.tsp
namespace MyService;
op upload(blobName: string): void;
// client.tsp
namespace MyCustomizations;
model MyServiceClientOptions {
blob: string;
}
@@clientInitialization(MyService, MyServiceClientOptions)
@@paramAlias(MyServiceClientOptions.blob, "blobName")
// The generated client will have `blobName` on it. We will also
// elevate the existing `blob` parameter to the client level.

@protocolAPI

Whether you want to generate an operation as a protocol operation.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.protocolAPI(value?: valueof boolean, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Operation

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valuevalueof booleanWhether to generate the operation as protocol or not.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@protocolAPI(false)
op test: void;

@responseAsBool

Indicates that a HEAD operation should be modeled as Response. 404 will not raise an error, instead the service method will return false. 2xx will return true. Everything else will still raise an error.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.responseAsBool(scope?: valueof string)

Target

Operation

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof string

Examples

@responseAsBool
@head
op headOperation(): void;

@scope

To define the client scope of an operation.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.scope(scope?: valueof string)

Target

Operation

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@scope("!csharp")
op test: void;

@usage

Override usage for models/enums. A model/enum’s default usage info is always calculated by the operations that use it. You could use this decorator to override the default usage info. When setting usage for namespaces, the usage info will be propagated to the models defined in the namespace. If the model has an usage override, the model override takes precedence. For example, with operation definition op test(): OutputModel, the model OutputModel has default usage Usage.output. After adding decorator @@usage(OutputModel, Usage.input | Usage.output), the final usage result for OutputModel is Usage.input | Usage.output. The usage info for models will be propagated to models’ properties, parent models, discriminated sub models. The override usage should not be narrow than the usage calculated by operation, and different override usage should not conflict with each other, otherwise a warning will be added to diagnostics list.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.usage(value: EnumMember | Union, scope?: valueof string)

Target

Model | Enum | Union | Namespace

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
valueEnumMember | UnionThe usage info you want to set for this model.
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

Expand usage for model
op test(): OutputModel;
// usage result for `OutputModel` is `Usage.input | Usage.output`
@usage(Usage.input)
model OutputModel {
prop: string;
}
Propagation of usage
Usage.output
@discriminator("kind")
model Fish {
age: int32;
}
// Usage.input | Usage.output
@discriminator("sharktype")
@usage(Usage.input)
model Shark extends Fish {
kind: "shark";
origin: Origin;
}
// Usage.output
model Salmon extends Fish {
kind: "salmon";
}
// Usage.output
model SawShark extends Shark {
sharktype: "saw";
}
// Usage.output
model Origin {
country: string;
city: string;
manufacture: string;
}
@get
op getModel(): Fish;

@useSystemTextJsonConverter

Whether a model needs the custom JSON converter, this is only used for backward compatibility for csharp.

@Azure.ClientGenerator.Core.useSystemTextJsonConverter(scope?: valueof string)

Target

Model

Parameters

NameTypeDescription
scopevalueof stringThe language scope you want this decorator to apply to. If not specified, will apply to all language emitters.
You can use ”!” to specify negation such as ”!(java, python)” or “!java, !python”.

Examples

@useSystemTextJsonConverter
model MyModel {
prop: string;
}