@GwtCompatible public final class MoreObjects extends Object
Object, and are not already provided in
 Objects.
 See the Guava User Guide on
 writing
 Object methods with MoreObjects.
Objects)| Modifier and Type | Class and Description | 
|---|---|
static class  | 
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper
Support class for  
toStringHelper(java.lang.Object). | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
static <T> T | 
firstNonNull(T first,
            T second)
Returns the first of two given parameters that is not  
null, if either is, or otherwise
 throws a NullPointerException. | 
static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper | 
toStringHelper(Class<?> clazz)
Creates an instance of  
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper in the same manner as
 toStringHelper(Object), but using the simple name of clazz instead of using an
 instance's Object.getClass(). | 
static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper | 
toStringHelper(Object self)
Creates an instance of  
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper. | 
static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper | 
toStringHelper(String className)
Creates an instance of  
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper in the same manner as
 toStringHelper(Object), but using className instead of using an instance's
 Object.getClass(). | 
public static <T> T firstNonNull(@Nullable T first, @Nullable T second)
null, if either is, or otherwise
 throws a NullPointerException.
 To find the first non-null element in an iterable, use Iterables.find(iterable, Predicates.notNull()). For varargs, use Iterables.find(Arrays.asList(a, b, c, ...), Predicates.notNull()), static importing as
 necessary.
 
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 it is non-null; otherwise second if it is non-nullNullPointerException - if both first and second are nullObjects.firstNonNull()).public static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(Object self)
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper.
 This is helpful for implementing Object.toString(). Specification by example:
 
 // Returns "ClassName{}"
 MoreObjects.toStringHelper(this)
     .toString();
 // Returns "ClassName{x=1}"
 MoreObjects.toStringHelper(this)
     .add("x", 1)
     .toString();
 // Returns "MyObject{x=1}"
 MoreObjects.toStringHelper("MyObject")
     .add("x", 1)
     .toString();
 // Returns "ClassName{x=1, y=foo}"
 MoreObjects.toStringHelper(this)
     .add("x", 1)
     .add("y", "foo")
     .toString();
 // Returns "ClassName{x=1}"
 MoreObjects.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 nameObjects.toStringHelper()).public static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(Class<?> clazz)
MoreObjects.ToStringHelper in the same manner as
 toStringHelper(Object), but using the simple 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 instanceObjects.toStringHelper()).public static MoreObjects.ToStringHelper toStringHelper(String className)
MoreObjects.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 typeObjects.toStringHelper()).Copyright © 2010–2017. All rights reserved.