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---
id: eradicate
title: "Infer : Eradicate"
---
> "I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null
> reference in 1965."
>
> [Tony Hoare](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Hoare)
### What is Infer:Eradicate?
Infer:Eradicate is a type checker for @Nullable annotations for Java. It is part
of the Infer static analysis suite of tools. The goal is to eradicate null
pointer exceptions.
<a href="https://developer.android.com/reference/android/support/annotation/Nullable.html">@Nullable</a>
annotations denote that a parameter, field or the return value of a method can
be null. When decorating a parameter, this denotes that the parameter can
legitimately be null and the method will need to deal with it. When decorating a
method, this denotes the method might legitimately return null.
Starting from @Nullable-annotated programs, the checker performs a flow
sensitive analysis to propagate the nullability through assignments and calls,
and flags errors for unprotected accesses to nullable values or
inconsistent/missing annotations. It can also be used to add annotations to a
previously un-annotated program.
### What is the @Nullable convention?
If you say nothing, you're saying that the value cannot be null. This is the
recommended option when possible:
Program safely, annotate nothing!
When this cannot be done, add a @Nullable annotation before the type to indicate
that the value can be null.
### What is annotated?
Annotations are placed at the interface of method calls and field accesses:
- Parameters and return type of a method declaration.
- Field declarations.
Local variable declarations are not annotated: their nullability is inferred.
### How is Infer:Eradicate invoked?
Eradicate can be invoked by adding the option `--eradicate` to the checkers mode
as in this example:
```bash
infer run -a checkers --eradicate -- javac Test.java
```
The checker will report an error on the following program that accesses a
nullable value without null check:
```java
class C {
int getLength(@Nullable String s) {
return s.length();
}
}
```
But it will not report an error on this guarded dereference:
```java
class C {
int getLength(@Nullable String s) {
if (s != null) {
return s.length();
} else {
return -1;
}
}
}
```
Eradicate reports the following [warnings](/docs/eradicate-warnings).