@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
 @Target(value={FIELD,METHOD})
public @interface XmlElementRef
Maps a JavaBean property to a XML element derived from property's type.
Usage
 @XmlElementRef annotation can be used with a
 JavaBean property or from within XmlElementRefs
 
 This annotation dynamically associates an XML element name with the JavaBean
 property. When a JavaBean property is annotated with XmlElement, the XML element name is statically derived from the
 JavaBean property name. However, when this annotation is used, the
 XML element name is derived from the instance of the type of the
 JavaBean property at runtime.
 
     public void setTerm(JAXBElement<? extends Operator>);
     public JAXBElement<? extends Operator> getTerm();
 
 An element factory method annotated with  XmlElementDecl is
 used to create a JAXBElement instance, containing an XML
 element name. The presence of @XmlElementRef annotation on an
 element property indicates that the element name from JAXBElement
 instance be used instead of deriving an XML element name from the
 JavaBean property name.
 
The usage is subject to the following constraints:
JAXBElement, then
        @XmlElementRef.name() and @XmlElementRef.namespace() must
        point an element factory method  with an @XmlElementDecl
        annotation in a class annotated  with @XmlRegistry (usually
        ObjectFactory class generated by  the schema compiler) :
        JAXBElement, then the type referenced by the
        property or field must be annotated  with XmlRootElement. XmlElementWrapper, XmlJavaTypeAdapter.
   See "Package Specification" in jakarta.xml.bind.package javadoc for additional common information.
Example 1: Ant Task Example
The following Java class hierarchy models an Ant build script. An Ant task corresponds to a class in the class hierarchy. The XML element name of an Ant task is indicated by the @XmlRootElement annotation on its corresponding class.
     @XmlRootElement(name="target")
     class Target {
         // The presence of @XmlElementRef indicates that the XML
         // element name will be derived from the @XmlRootElement
         // annotation on the type (for e.g. "jar" for JarTask).
         @XmlElementRef
         List<Task> tasks;
     }
     abstract class Task {
     }
     @XmlRootElement(name="jar")
     class JarTask extends Task {
         ...
     }
     @XmlRootElement(name="javac")
     class JavacTask extends Task {
         ...
     }
 
     <!-- XML Schema fragment -->
     <xs:element name="target" type="Target">
     <xs:complexType name="Target">
       <xs:sequence>
         <xs:choice maxOccurs="unbounded">
           <xs:element ref="jar">
           <xs:element ref="javac">
         </xs:choice>
       </xs:sequence>
     </xs:complexType>
 
 Thus the following code fragment:
     Target target = new Target();
     target.tasks.add(new JarTask());
     target.tasks.add(new JavacTask());
     marshal(target);
 
 will produce the following XML output:
 
     <target>
       <jar>
         ....
       </jar>
       <javac>
         ....
       </javac>
     </target>
 
 It is not an error to have a class that extends Task
 that doesn't have XmlRootElement. But they can't show up in an
 XML instance (because they don't have XML element names).
 
Example 2: XML Schema Susbstitution group support
The following example shows the annotations for XML Schema substitution groups. The annotations and the ObjectFactory are derived from the schema.
     @XmlElement
     class Math {
         //  The value of type()is
         //  JAXBElement.class , which indicates the XML
         //  element name ObjectFactory - in general a class marked
         //  with @XmlRegistry. (See ObjectFactory below)
         //
         //  The name() is "operator", a pointer to a
         // factory method annotated with a
         //  XmlElementDecl with the name "operator". Since
         //  "operator" is the head of a substitution group that
         //  contains elements "add" and "sub" elements, "operator"
         //  element can be substituted in an instance document by
         //  elements "add" or "sub". At runtime, JAXBElement
         //  instance contains the element name that has been
         //  substituted in the XML document.
         //
         @XmlElementRef(type=JAXBElement.class,name="operator")
         JAXBElement<? extends Operator> term;
     }
     @XmlRegistry
     class ObjectFactory {
         @XmlElementDecl(name="operator")
         JAXBElement<Operator> createOperator(Operator o) {...}
         @XmlElementDecl(name="add",substitutionHeadName="operator")
         JAXBElement<Operator> createAdd(Operator o) {...}
         @XmlElementDecl(name="sub",substitutionHeadName="operator")
         JAXBElement<Operator> createSub(Operator o) {...}
     }
     class Operator {
         ...
     }
 
 Thus, the following code fragment
     Math m = new Math();
     m.term = new ObjectFactory().createAdd(new Operator());
     marshal(m);
 
 will produce the following XML output:
 
     <math>
       <add>...</add>
     </math>
 XmlElementRefs| Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description | 
|---|---|
| java.lang.String | name | 
| java.lang.String | namespaceThis parameter and  name()are used to determine the
 XML element for the JavaBean property. | 
| boolean | requiredCustomize the element declaration to be required. | 
| java.lang.Class<?> | typeThe Java type being referenced. | 
public abstract java.lang.Class<?> type
If the value is DEFAULT.class, the type is inferred from the the type of the JavaBean property.
public abstract java.lang.String namespace
name() are used to determine the
 XML element for the JavaBean property.
  If type() is JAXBElement.class , then
 namespace() and name()
 point to a factory method with XmlElementDecl. The XML
 element name is the element name from the factory method's
 XmlElementDecl annotation or if an element from its
 substitution group (of which it is a head element) has been
 substituted in the XML document, then the element name is from the
 XmlElementDecl on the substituted element.
 
 If type() is not JAXBElement.class, then
 the XML element name is the XML element name statically
 associated with the type using the annotation XmlRootElement on the type. If the type is not annotated with
 an XmlElementDecl, then it is an error.
 
 If type() is not JAXBElement.class, then
 this value must be "".
public abstract java.lang.String name
namespace()public abstract boolean required
If required() is true, then Javabean property is mapped to an XML schema element declaration with minOccurs="1". maxOccurs is "1" for a single valued property and "unbounded" for a multivalued property.
If required() is false, then the Javabean property is mapped to XML Schema element declaration with minOccurs="0". maxOccurs is "1" for a single valued property and "unbounded" for a multivalued property.
 For compatibility with Jakarta XML Binding, this property defaults to true,
 despite the fact that XmlElement.required() defaults to false.