Java tutorial
/* * Copyright 2001-2004 The Apache Software Foundation * * 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 org.apache.commons.collections.comparators; import java.io.Serializable; import java.util.Comparator; /** * Reverses the order of another comparator by reversing the arguments * to its {@link #compare(Object, Object) compare} method. * * @since Commons Collections 2.0 * @version $Revision: 1.20 $ $Date: 2004/05/16 11:49:24 $ * * @author Henri Yandell * @author Michael A. Smith * * @see java.util.Collections#reverseOrder() */ public class ReverseComparator implements Comparator, Serializable { /** Serialization version from Collections 2.0. */ private static final long serialVersionUID = 2858887242028539265L; /** The comparator being decorated. */ private Comparator comparator; //----------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Creates a comparator that compares objects based on the inverse of their * natural ordering. Using this Constructor will create a ReverseComparator * that is functionally identical to the Comparator returned by * java.util.Collections.<b>reverseOrder()</b>. * * @see java.util.Collections#reverseOrder() */ public ReverseComparator() { this(null); } /** * Creates a comparator that inverts the comparison * of the given comparator. If you pass in <code>null</code>, * the ReverseComparator defaults to reversing the * natural order, as per * {@link java.util.Collections#reverseOrder()}</b>. * * @param comparator Comparator to reverse */ public ReverseComparator(Comparator comparator) { if (comparator != null) { this.comparator = comparator; } else { this.comparator = ComparableComparator.getInstance(); } } //----------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Compares two objects in reverse order. * * @param obj1 the first object to compare * @param obj2 the second object to compare * @return negative if obj1 is less, positive if greater, zero if equal */ public int compare(Object obj1, Object obj2) { return comparator.compare(obj2, obj1); } //----------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Implement a hash code for this comparator that is consistent with * {@link #equals(Object) equals}. * * @return a suitable hash code * @since Commons Collections 3.0 */ public int hashCode() { return "ReverseComparator".hashCode() ^ comparator.hashCode(); } /** * Returns <code>true</code> iff <i>that</i> Object is * is a {@link Comparator} whose ordering is known to be * equivalent to mine. * <p> * This implementation returns <code>true</code> * iff <code><i>object</i>.{@link Object#getClass() getClass()}</code> * equals <code>this.getClass()</code>, and the underlying * comparators are equal. * Subclasses may want to override this behavior to remain consistent * with the {@link Comparator#equals(Object) equals} contract. * * @param object the object to compare to * @return true if equal * @since Commons Collections 3.0 */ public boolean equals(Object object) { if (this == object) { return true; } else if (null == object) { return false; } else if (object.getClass().equals(this.getClass())) { ReverseComparator thatrc = (ReverseComparator) object; return comparator.equals(thatrc.comparator); } else { return false; } } }