@GwtCompatible public final class Objects extends Object
Object.
See the Guava User Guide on
writing
Object methods with Objects.
| Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
|---|---|
static class |
Objects.ToStringHelper
Deprecated.
Use
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper instead. This class is scheduled for removal
in Guava 21.0. |
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
static boolean |
equal(Object a,
Object b)
Determines whether two possibly-null objects are equal.
|
static <T> T |
firstNonNull(T first,
T second)
Deprecated.
Use
MoreObjects.firstNonNull(T, T) instead. This method is scheduled for removal
in Guava 21.0. |
static int |
hashCode(Object... objects)
Generates a hash code for multiple values.
|
static Objects.ToStringHelper |
toStringHelper(Class<?> clazz)
Deprecated.
Use
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(Class) instead. This method is scheduled for
removal in Guava 21.0. |
static Objects.ToStringHelper |
toStringHelper(Object self)
Deprecated.
Use
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(Object) instead. This method is scheduled
for removal in Guava 21.0. |
static Objects.ToStringHelper |
toStringHelper(String className)
Deprecated.
Use
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(String) instead. This method is scheduled
for removal in Guava 21.0. |
public static boolean equal(@Nullable Object a, @Nullable Object b)
true if a and b are both null.
true if a and b are both non-null and they are equal according to
Object.equals(Object).
false in all other situations.
This assumes that any non-null objects passed to this function conform to the
equals() contract.
Note for Java 7 and later: This method should be treated as deprecated; use
Objects.equals(java.lang.Object, java.lang.Object) instead.
public static int hashCode(@Nullable Object... objects)
Arrays.hashCode(Object[]). Note that array arguments to this method, with the exception
of a single Object array, do not get any special handling; their hash codes are based on
identity and not contents.
This is useful for implementing Object.hashCode(). For example, in an object that
has three properties, x, y, and z, one could write:
public int hashCode() {
return Objects.hashCode(getX(), getY(), getZ());
}
Warning: When a single object is supplied, the returned hash code does not equal the hash code of that object.
Note for Java 7 and later: This method should be treated as deprecated; use
Objects.hash(java.lang.Object...) instead.
@Deprecated public static Objects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(Object self)
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(Object) instead. This method is scheduled
for removal in Guava 21.0.Objects.ToStringHelper.
This is helpful for implementing Object.toString(). Specification by example:
// Returns "ClassName{}"
Objects.toStringHelper(this)
.toString();
// Returns "ClassName{x=1}"
Objects.toStringHelper(this)
.add("x", 1)
.toString();
// Returns "MyObject{x=1}"
Objects.toStringHelper("MyObject")
.add("x", 1)
.toString();
// Returns "ClassName{x=1, y=foo}"
Objects.toStringHelper(this)
.add("x", 1)
.add("y", "foo")
.toString();
// Returns "ClassName{x=1}"
Objects.toStringHelper(this)
.omitNullValues()
.add("x", 1)
.add("y", null)
.toString();
}
Note that in GWT, class names are often obfuscated.
self - the object to generate the string for (typically this), used only for its
class name@Deprecated public static Objects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(Class<?> clazz)
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(Class) instead. This method is scheduled for
removal in Guava 21.0.Objects.ToStringHelper in the same manner as
toStringHelper(Object), but using the name of clazz instead of using an
instance's Object.getClass().
Note that in GWT, class names are often obfuscated.
clazz - the Class of the instance@Deprecated public static Objects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(String className)
MoreObjects.toStringHelper(String) instead. This method is scheduled
for removal in Guava 21.0.Objects.ToStringHelper in the same manner as
toStringHelper(Object), but using className instead of using an
instance's Object.getClass().className - the name of the instance type@Deprecated public static <T> T firstNonNull(@Nullable T first, @Nullable T second)
MoreObjects.firstNonNull(T, T) instead. This method is scheduled for removal
in Guava 21.0.null, if either is, or otherwise
throws a NullPointerException.
Note: if first is represented as an Optional, this can be
accomplished with first.or(second). That approach also allows
for lazy evaluation of the fallback instance, using first.or(Supplier).
first if first is not null, or second if first
is null and second is not nullNullPointerException - if both first and second were nullCopyright © 2010-2016. All Rights Reserved.