java.lang.annotation
Interface Annotation
- All Known Implementing Classes:
- Deprecated, Documented, Inherited, Override, Retention, SuppressWarnings, Target
public interface Annotation
The common interface extended by all annotation types. Note that an
interface that manually extends this one does not define
an annotation type. Also note that this interface does not itself
define an annotation type.
- Since:
- 1.5
Method Summary |
Class<? extends Annotation> |
annotationType()
Returns the annotation type of this annotation. |
boolean |
equals(Object obj)
Returns true if the specified object represents an annotation
that is logically equivalent to this one. |
int |
hashCode()
Returns the hash code of this annotation, as defined below: |
String |
toString()
Returns a string representation of this annotation. |
equals
boolean equals(Object obj)
- Returns true if the specified object represents an annotation
that is logically equivalent to this one. In other words,
returns true if the specified object is an instance of the same
annotation type as this instance, all of whose members are equal
to the corresponding member of this annotation, as defined below:
- Two corresponding primitive typed members whose values are
x and y are considered equal if x == y,
unless their type is float or double.
- Two corresponding float members whose values
are x and y are considered equal if
Float.valueOf(x).equals(Float.valueOf(y)).
(Unlike the == operator, NaN is considered equal
to itself, and 0.0f unequal to -0.0f.)
- Two corresponding double members whose values
are x and y are considered equal if
Double.valueOf(x).equals(Double.valueOf(y)).
(Unlike the == operator, NaN is considered equal
to itself, and 0.0 unequal to -0.0.)
- Two corresponding String, Class, enum, or
annotation typed members whose values are x and y
are considered equal if x.equals(y). (Note that this
definition is recursive for annotation typed members.)
- Two corresponding array typed members x and y
are considered equal if Arrays.equals(x, y), for the
appropriate overloading of
Arrays.equals(long[], long[])
.
- Overrides:
equals
in class Object
- Parameters:
obj
- the reference object with which to compare.
- Returns:
- true if the specified object represents an annotation
that is logically equivalent to this one, otherwise false
- See Also:
Object.hashCode()
,
Hashtable
hashCode
int hashCode()
- Returns the hash code of this annotation, as defined below:
The hash code of an annotation is the sum of the hash codes
of its members (including those with default values), as defined
below:
The hash code of an annotation member is (127 times the hash code
of the member-name as computed by String.hashCode()
) XOR
the hash code of the member-value, as defined below:
The hash code of a member-value depends on its type:
- The hash code of a primitive value v is equal to
WrapperType.valueOf(v).hashCode(), where
WrapperType is the wrapper type corresponding
to the primitive type of v (
Byte
,
Character
, Double
, Float
, Integer
,
Long
, Short
, or Boolean
).
- The hash code of a string, enum, class, or annotation member-value
I v is computed as by calling
v.hashCode(). (In the case of annotation
member values, this is a recursive definition.)
- The hash code of an array member-value is computed by calling
the appropriate overloading of
Arrays.hashCode
on the value. (There is one overloading for each primitive
type, and one for object reference types.)
- Overrides:
hashCode
in class Object
- Returns:
- the hash code of this annotation
- See Also:
Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
,
Hashtable
toString
String toString()
- Returns a string representation of this annotation. The details
of the representation are implementation-dependent, but the following
may be regarded as typical:
@com.acme.util.Name(first=Alfred, middle=E., last=Neuman)
- Overrides:
toString
in class Object
- Returns:
- a string representation of this annotation
annotationType
Class<? extends Annotation> annotationType()
- Returns the annotation type of this annotation.
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For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java 2 SDK SE Developer Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples. Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.