Annotation Interface Basic
The Basic annotation may be applied to a property or
 instance variable whose type is any one of the following:
 
- a Java primitive type, or wrapper of a primitive type,
 String,BigIntegerorBigDecimal,LocalDate,LocalTime,LocalDateTime,OffsetTime,OffsetDateTime,Instant, orYearDateorCalendar,java.sql.Date,java.sql.Time, orjava.sql.Timestamp,byte[]orByte[],char[]orCharacter[],- a Java 
enumtype, or - any other serializable type.
 
The use of the Basic annotation is optional for persistent
 fields and properties of these types. If the Basic annotation
 is not specified for such a field or property, the default values of
 the Basic annotation apply.
 
The database column mapped by the persistent field or property may
 be specified using the Column annotation.
 
Example 1:
Example 2:
The use of Date, Calendar,
 java.sql.Date, java.sql.Time, java.sql.Timestamp,
 Character[], or Byte[] as the type of a basic attribute
 is now discouraged. Newly-written code should use the date/time types
 defined in the package java.time, or the primitive array types
 char[] and byte[].
- Since:
 - 1.0
 
- 
Optional Element Summary
Optional Elements 
- 
Element Details
- 
fetch
FetchType fetch(Optional) Whether the value of the field or property should be lazily loaded or must be eagerly fetched.- The 
EAGERstrategy is a requirement on the persistence provider runtime that the associated entity must be eagerly fetched. - The 
LAZYstrategy is a hint to the persistence provider runtime. 
If not specified, defaults to
EAGER.- Default:
 - EAGER
 
 - The 
 - 
optional
boolean optional(Optional) Specifies whether the value of the field or property may be null.This is a hint and is disregarded for primitive types; it may be used in schema generation to infer that the mapped column is
not null.If not specified, defaults to
true.- Default:
 - true
 
 
 -