@Target(value=TYPE)
 @Retention(value=RUNTIME)
public static @interface BeanFactory.Generate
If no value is supplied, a BeanFactory will be generated for the class that the annotation is applied to. So, if you have a custom class for which you would like to generate a BeanFactory, you can just annotate it like this:
  @BeanFactory.Generate
 public MyCanvas extends Canvas {
    ...
 }If you want to generate BeanFactories for framework classes, you can supply a value for the annotation, where the value is an array of class literals. For instance:
  @BeanFactory.Generate({ListGrid.class, TreeGrid.class})
 public interface EmptyInterface {
 }
 Note that when supplying values for the annotation, the class you
 annotate (here EmptyInterface) will not itself have
 a BeanFactory generated for it. Thus, you can use an empty inner interface
 for this purpose.
 
 If you want to generate BeanFactories for all Canvas
 subclasses or all FormItem 
 subclasses, you can use BeanFactory.CanvasMetaFactory or 
 BeanFactory.FormItemMetaFactory instead. However, that is less
 efficient if there are only a limited number of classes which need
 BeanFactories.
| Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description | 
|---|---|
| java.lang.Class[] | value |