Java tutorial
/* * Copyright (C) 2011 The Android Open Source Project * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package android.util; /** * A property is an abstraction that can be used to represent a <emb>mutable</em> value that is held * in a <em>host</em> object. The Property's {@link #set(Object, Object)} or {@link #get(Object)} * methods can be implemented in terms of the private fields of the host object, or via "setter" and * "getter" methods or by some other mechanism, as appropriate. * * @param <T> The class on which the property is declared. * @param <V> The type that this property represents. */ public abstract class Property<T, V> { private final String mName; private final Class<V> mType; /** * This factory method creates and returns a Property given the <code>class</code> and * <code>name</code> parameters, where the <code>"name"</code> parameter represents either: * <ul> * <li>a public <code>getName()</code> method on the class which takes no arguments, plus an * optional public <code>setName()</code> method which takes a value of the same type * returned by <code>getName()</code> * <li>a public <code>isName()</code> method on the class which takes no arguments, plus an * optional public <code>setName()</code> method which takes a value of the same type * returned by <code>isName()</code> * <li>a public <code>name</code> field on the class * </ul> * * <p>If either of the get/is method alternatives is found on the class, but an appropriate * <code>setName()</code> method is not found, the <code>Property</code> will be * {@link #isReadOnly() readOnly}. Calling the {@link #set(Object, Object)} method on such * a property is allowed, but will have no effect.</p> * * <p>If neither the methods nor the field are found on the class a * {@link NoSuchPropertyException} exception will be thrown.</p> */ public static <T, V> Property<T, V> of(Class<T> hostType, Class<V> valueType, String name) { return new ReflectiveProperty<T, V>(hostType, valueType, name); } /** * A constructor that takes an identifying name and {@link #getType() type} for the property. */ public Property(Class<V> type, String name) { mName = name; mType = type; } /** * Returns true if the {@link #set(Object, Object)} method does not set the value on the target * object (in which case the {@link #set(Object, Object) set()} method should throw a {@link * NoSuchPropertyException} exception). This may happen if the Property wraps functionality that * allows querying the underlying value but not setting it. For example, the {@link #of(Class, * Class, String)} factory method may return a Property with name "foo" for an object that has * only a <code>getFoo()</code> or <code>isFoo()</code> method, but no matching * <code>setFoo()</code> method. */ public boolean isReadOnly() { return false; } /** * Sets the value on <code>object</code> which this property represents. If the method is unable * to set the value on the target object it will throw an {@link UnsupportedOperationException} * exception. */ public void set(T object, V value) { throw new UnsupportedOperationException("Property " + getName() + " is read-only"); } /** * Returns the current value that this property represents on the given <code>object</code>. */ public abstract V get(T object); /** * Returns the name for this property. */ public String getName() { return mName; } /** * Returns the type for this property. */ public Class<V> getType() { return mType; } }