@GwtCompatible public interface Predicate<T>
java.util.function.Predicate.
 The Predicates class provides common predicates and related utilities.
 
See the Guava User Guide article on the use of Predicate.
 
This interface is now a legacy type. Use java.util.function.Predicate (or the
 appropriate primitive specialization such as IntPredicate) instead whenever possible.
 Otherwise, at least reduce explicit dependencies on this type by using lambda expressions
 or method references instead of classes, leaving your code easier to migrate in the future.
 
To use a reference of this type (say, named guavaPredicate) in a context where java.util.function.Predicate is expected, use the method reference guavaPredicate::apply. For the other direction, use javaUtilPredicate::test. A future
 version of this interface will be made to extend java.util.function.Predicate, so
 that conversion will be necessary in only one direction. At that time, this interface will be
 officially discouraged.
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
boolean | 
apply(T input)
Returns the result of applying this predicate to  
input (Java 8 users, see notes in the
 class documentation above). | 
boolean | 
equals(Object object)
Indicates whether another object is equal to this predicate. 
 | 
@CanIgnoreReturnValue boolean apply(@NullableDecl T input)
input (Java 8 users, see notes in the
 class documentation above). This method is generally expected, but not absolutely
 required, to have the following properties:
 Objects.equal(a, b) implies that predicate.apply(a) ==
       predicate.apply(b)).
 NullPointerException - if input is null and this predicate does not accept null
     argumentsboolean equals(@NullableDecl Object object)
Most implementations will have no reason to override the behavior of Object.equals(java.lang.Object).
 However, an implementation may also choose to return true whenever object is a
 Predicate that it considers interchangeable with this one. "Interchangeable"
 typically means that this.apply(t) == that.apply(t) for all t of type
 T). Note that a false result from this method does not imply that the
 predicates are known not to be interchangeable.
equals in class Objectobject - the reference object with which to compare.true if this object is the same as the obj
          argument; false otherwise.Object.hashCode(), 
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