public static class PropertyConstraint.And extends Object implements PropertyConstraint
PropertyConstraint.And, PropertyConstraint.ByAnnotationType, PropertyConstraint.ByClass, PropertyConstraint.Enumeration, PropertyConstraint.ExactValue, PropertyConstraint.OrANY, NONE| Constructor and Description |
|---|
And(PropertyConstraint c1,
PropertyConstraint c2)
Create a new
And from two child constraints. |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
boolean |
accept(Object object)
accept returns true if the value fulfills the
constraint. |
PropertyConstraint |
getChild1()
Get the first child PropertyConstraint.
|
PropertyConstraint |
getChild2()
Get the seccond child PropertyConstraint.
|
boolean |
subConstraintOf(PropertyConstraint pc)
subConstraintOf returns true if the constraint
is a sub-constraint. |
String |
toString() |
public And(PropertyConstraint c1, PropertyConstraint c2)
And from two child constraints.c1 - the first childc2 - the seccond childpublic PropertyConstraint getChild1()
public PropertyConstraint getChild2()
public boolean accept(Object object)
PropertyConstraintaccept returns true if the value fulfills the
constraint.
Manually compare items with the PropertyConstraint. Node:
this will ususaly be done for you in an AnnotationType instance
Use for implementing accept() on AnnotatoinTypeaccept in interface PropertyConstraintobject - an Object to check.boolean.public boolean subConstraintOf(PropertyConstraint pc)
PropertyConstraintsubConstraintOf returns true if the constraint
is a sub-constraint.
A pair of constraints super and sub are in a superConstraint/subConstraint relationship if every object accepted by sub is also accepted by super. To put it another way, if instanceOf was used as a set-membership indicator function over some set of objects, then the set produced by super would be a superset of that produced by sub.
It is not expected that constraints will neccesarily
maintain references to super/sub types. It will be more usual
to infer this relationship by introspecting the constraints
themselves. For example,
PropertyConstraint.ByClass will infer
subConstraintOf by looking at the possible class of all items
matching subConstraint.
subConstraintOf in interface PropertyConstraintpc - a PropertyConstraint to check.boolean.Copyright © 2020 BioJava. All rights reserved.