Class Equivalence<T>
- java.lang.Object
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- com.google.common.base.Equivalence<T>
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- All Implemented Interfaces:
BiPredicate<@Nullable T,@Nullable T>
@GwtCompatible public abstract class Equivalence<T> extends Object implements BiPredicate<@Nullable T,@Nullable T>
A strategy for determining whether two instances are considered equivalent, and for computing hash codes in a manner consistent with that equivalence. Two examples of equivalences are the identity equivalence and the "equals" equivalence.- Since:
- 10.0 (mostly source-compatible since 4.0)
- Author:
- Bob Lee, Ben Yu, Gregory Kick
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Nested Class Summary
Nested Classes Modifier and Type Class Description static classEquivalence.Wrapper<T extends @Nullable Object>Wraps an object so thatEquivalence.Wrapper.equals(Object)andEquivalence.Wrapper.hashCode()delegate to anEquivalence.
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Constructor Summary
Constructors Modifier Constructor Description protectedEquivalence()Constructor for use by subclasses.
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Method Summary
All Methods Static Methods Instance Methods Abstract Methods Concrete Methods Deprecated Methods Modifier and Type Method Description protected abstract booleandoEquivalent(T a, T b)Implemented by the user to determine whetheraandbare considered equivalent, subject to the requirements specified inequivalent(T, T).protected abstract intdoHash(T t)Implemented by the user to return a hash code fort, subject to the requirements specified inhash(T).static Equivalence<Object>equals()Returns an equivalence that delegates toObject.equals(java.lang.Object)andObject.hashCode().booleanequivalent(@Nullable T a, @Nullable T b)Returnstrueif the given objects are considered equivalent.Predicate<@Nullable T>equivalentTo(@Nullable T target)Returns a predicate that evaluates to true if and only if the input is equivalent totargetaccording to this equivalence relation.inthash(@Nullable T t)Returns a hash code fort.static Equivalence<Object>identity()Returns an equivalence that uses==to compare values andSystem.identityHashCode(Object)to compute the hash code.<F> Equivalence<F>onResultOf(Function<? super F,? extends @Nullable T> function)Returns a new equivalence relation forFwhich evaluates equivalence by first applyingfunctionto the argument, then evaluating usingthis.<S extends @Nullable T>
Equivalence<Iterable<S>>pairwise()Returns an equivalence over iterables based on the equivalence of their elements.booleantest(@Nullable T t, @Nullable T u)Deprecated.Provided only to satisfy theBiPredicateinterface; useequivalent(T, T)instead.<S extends @Nullable T>
Equivalence.Wrapper<S>wrap(S reference)Returns a wrapper ofreferencethat implementsObject.equals()such thatwrap(a).equals(wrap(b))if and only ifequivalent(a, b).-
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
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Methods inherited from interface java.util.function.BiPredicate
and, negate, or
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Constructor Detail
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Equivalence
protected Equivalence()
Constructor for use by subclasses.
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Method Detail
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equivalent
public final boolean equivalent(@Nullable T a, @Nullable T b)
Returnstrueif the given objects are considered equivalent.This method describes an equivalence relation on object references, meaning that for all references
x,y, andz(any of which may be null):equivalent(x, x)is true (reflexive property)equivalent(x, y)andequivalent(y, x)each return the same result (symmetric property)- If
equivalent(x, y)andequivalent(y, z)are both true, thenequivalent(x, z)is also true (transitive property)
Note that all calls to
equivalent(x, y)are expected to return the same result as long as neitherxnoryis modified.
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test
@Deprecated public final boolean test(@Nullable T t, @Nullable T u)
Deprecated.Provided only to satisfy theBiPredicateinterface; useequivalent(T, T)instead.
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doEquivalent
@ForOverride protected abstract boolean doEquivalent(T a, T b)
Implemented by the user to determine whetheraandbare considered equivalent, subject to the requirements specified inequivalent(T, T).This method should not be called except by
equivalent(T, T). Whenequivalent(T, T)calls this method,aandbare guaranteed to be distinct, non-null instances.- Since:
- 10.0 (previously, subclasses would override equivalent())
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hash
public final int hash(@Nullable T t)
Returns a hash code fort.The
hashhas the following properties:- It is consistent: for any reference
x, multiple invocations ofhash(x} consistently return the same value providedxremains unchanged according to the definition of the equivalence. The hash need not remain consistent from one execution of an application to another execution of the same application. - It is distributable across equivalence: for any references
xandy, ifequivalent(x, y), thenhash(x) == hash(y). It is not necessary that the hash be distributable across inequivalence. Ifequivalence(x, y)is false,hash(x) == hash(y)may still be true. hash(null)is0.
- It is consistent: for any reference
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doHash
@ForOverride protected abstract int doHash(T t)
Implemented by the user to return a hash code fort, subject to the requirements specified inhash(T).This method should not be called except by
hash(T). Whenhash(T)calls this method,tis guaranteed to be non-null.- Since:
- 10.0 (previously, subclasses would override hash())
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onResultOf
public final <F> Equivalence<F> onResultOf(Function<? super F,? extends @Nullable T> function)
Returns a new equivalence relation forFwhich evaluates equivalence by first applyingfunctionto the argument, then evaluating usingthis. That is, for any pair of non-null objectsxandy,equivalence.onResultOf(function).equivalent(a, b)is true if and only ifequivalence.equivalent(function.apply(a), function.apply(b))is true.For example:
Equivalence<Person> SAME_AGE = Equivalence.equals().onResultOf(GET_PERSON_AGE);functionwill never be invoked with a null value.Note that
functionmust be consistent according tothisequivalence relation. That is, invokingFunction.apply(F)multiple times for a given value must return equivalent results. For example,Equivalence.identity().onResultOf(Functions.toStringFunction())is broken because it's not guaranteed thatObject.toString()) always returns the same string instance.- Since:
- 10.0
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wrap
public final <S extends @Nullable T> Equivalence.Wrapper<S> wrap(S reference)
Returns a wrapper ofreferencethat implementsObject.equals()such thatwrap(a).equals(wrap(b))if and only ifequivalent(a, b).The returned object is serializable if both this
Equivalenceandreferenceare serializable (including whenreferenceis null).- Since:
- 10.0
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pairwise
@GwtCompatible(serializable=true) public final <S extends @Nullable T> Equivalence<Iterable<S>> pairwise()
Returns an equivalence over iterables based on the equivalence of their elements. More specifically, two iterables are considered equivalent if they both contain the same number of elements, and each pair of corresponding elements is equivalent according tothis. Null iterables are equivalent to one another.Note that this method performs a similar function for equivalences as
Ordering.lexicographical()does for orderings.The returned object is serializable if this object is serializable.
- Since:
- 10.0
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equivalentTo
public final Predicate<@Nullable T> equivalentTo(@Nullable T target)
Returns a predicate that evaluates to true if and only if the input is equivalent totargetaccording to this equivalence relation.- Since:
- 10.0
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equals
public static Equivalence<Object> equals()
Returns an equivalence that delegates toObject.equals(java.lang.Object)andObject.hashCode().equivalent(T, T)returnstrueif both values are null, or if neither value is null andObject.equals(java.lang.Object)returnstrue.hash(T)returns0if passed a null value.- Since:
- 13.0, 8.0 (in Equivalences with null-friendly behavior), 4.0 (in Equivalences)
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identity
public static Equivalence<Object> identity()
Returns an equivalence that uses==to compare values andSystem.identityHashCode(Object)to compute the hash code.equivalent(T, T)returnstrueifa == b, including in the case that a and b are both null.- Since:
- 13.0, 4.0 (in Equivalences)
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