All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

drv.Predicate.drv Maven / Gradle / Ivy

Go to download

fastutil extends the Java Collections Framework by providing type-specific maps, sets, lists, and queues with a small memory footprint and fast operations; it provides also big (64-bit) arrays, sets, and lists, sorting algorithms, fast, practical I/O classes for binary and text files, and facilities for memory mapping large files. This jar (fastutil-core.jar) contains data structures based on integers, longs, doubles, and objects, only; fastutil.jar contains all classes. If you have both jars in your dependencies, this jar should be excluded.

The newest version!
/*
 * Copyright (C) 2020-2022 Sebastiano Vigna
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */


package PACKAGE;

import java.util.Objects;
import java.util.function.Predicate;

/** A type-specific {@link Predicate}; provides methods to test a primitive type both as object
 * and as primitive.
 *
 * 

Except for the boolean case, this interface extends both a parameterized {@link java.util.function.Predicate} * and a type-specific JDK predicate (e.g., {@link java.util.function.IntPredicate}). For types missing * a type-specific JDK predicate (e.g., {@code short} or {@code float}), we extend the predicate associated with * the smallest primitive type that can represent the current type (e.g., {@code int} or {@code double}, respectively). * * @see Predicate * @since 8.5.0 */ @FunctionalInterface #if ! KEY_CLASS_Boolean public interface KEY_PREDICATE KEY_GENERIC extends Predicate, JDK_PRIMITIVE_PREDICATE { #else public interface KEY_PREDICATE KEY_GENERIC extends Predicate { #endif #if ! KEYS_INT_LONG_DOUBLE /** * Evaluates this predicate on the given input. * * @param t the input. * @return {@code true} if the input matches the predicate, * otherwise {@code false} */ boolean test(KEY_TYPE t); #if ! KEY_CLASS_Boolean /** {@inheritDoc} * @deprecated Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead. */ @Deprecated @Override default boolean test(final KEY_TYPE_WIDENED t) { return test(KEY_NARROWING(t)); } #endif #if KEY_CLASS_Boolean /** * Returns a {@code BooleanPredicate} that returns the boolean to be tested unmodified. * @see java.util.function.UnaryOperator#identity() */ public static KEY_PREDICATE identity() { // Java is smart enough to see this lambda is stateless and will return the same instance every time. return b -> b; } /** Returns a {@code BooleanPredicate} that returns the negation of the boolean to be tested. */ public static KEY_PREDICATE negation() { return b -> !b; } #endif #endif /** {@inheritDoc} * @deprecated Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead. */ @Deprecated @Override default boolean test(final KEY_CLASS t) { return test(t.KEY_VALUE()); } /** * Returns a composed type-specific predicate that represents a short-circuiting logical * AND of this type-specific predicate and another. * @param other a predicate that will be logically-ANDed with this predicate. * @return a composed predicate that represents the short-circuiting logical * AND of this predicate and the {@code other} predicate. * @see Predicate#and * @apiNote Implementing classes should generally override this method and * keep the default implementation of the other overloads, which will * delegate to this method (after proper conversions). */ default KEY_PREDICATE and(final METHOD_ARG_PREDICATE other) { Objects.requireNonNull(other); return t -> test(t) && other.test(t); } #if KEYS_INT_LONG_DOUBLE /** * Returns a composed type-specific predicate that represents a short-circuiting logical * AND of this type-specific predicate and another. * *

WARNING: Overriding this method is almost always a mistake, as this * overload only exists to disambiguate. Instead, override the {@code and()} overload * that uses the JDK's primitive predicate type (e.g. {@link java.util.function.IntPredicate}). * *

If Java supported final default methods, this would be one, but sadly it does not. * *

If you checked and are overriding the version with {@code java.util.function.XPredicate}, and * you still see this warning, then your IDE is incorrectly conflating this method with the proper * method to override, and you can safely ignore this message. * * @param other a predicate that will be logically-ANDed with this predicate. * @return a composed predicate that represents the short-circuiting logical * AND of this predicate and the {@code other} predicate. * @see Predicate#and */ default KEY_PREDICATE and(final KEY_PREDICATE other) { return and((JDK_PRIMITIVE_PREDICATE) other); } #elif ! KEY_CLASS_Boolean /** {@inheritDoc} * @implNote Composing with a JDK type-specific predicate will be slightly less efficient than using a type-specific predicate, as the argument will have to be widened at each call. */ @Override default KEY_PREDICATE and(final JDK_PRIMITIVE_PREDICATE other) { return and(other instanceof KEY_PREDICATE ? (KEY_PREDICATE)other : (KEY_PREDICATE)other::test); } #endif /** {@inheritDoc} * @deprecated Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead. */ @Deprecated @Override default Predicate and(final Predicate other) { return Predicate.super.and(other); } @Override /** {@inheritDoc} */ default KEY_PREDICATE negate() { return t -> ! test(t); } /** * Returns a composed type-specific predicate that represents a short-circuiting logical * OR of this type-specific predicate and another. * @param other a predicate that will be logically-ORed with this predicate. * @return a composed predicate that represents the short-circuiting logical * OR of this predicate and the {@code other} predicate. * @see Predicate#or * @apiNote Implementing classes should generally override this method and * keep the default implementation of the other overloads, which will * delegate to this method (after proper conversions). */ default KEY_PREDICATE or(final METHOD_ARG_PREDICATE other) { Objects.requireNonNull(other); return t -> test(t) || other.test(t); } #if KEYS_INT_LONG_DOUBLE /** * Returns a composed type-specific predicate that represents a short-circuiting logical * OR of this type-specific predicate and another. * *

WARNING: Overriding this method is almost always a mistake, as this * overload only exists to disambiguate. Instead, override the {@code or()} overload * that uses the JDK's primitive predicate type (e.g. {@link java.util.function.IntPredicate}). * *

If Java supported final default methods, this would be one, but sadly it does not. * *

If you checked and are overriding the version with {@code java.util.function.XPredicate}, and * you still see this warning, then your IDE is incorrectly conflating this method with the proper * method to override, and you can safely ignore this message. * * @param other a predicate that will be logically-ORed with this predicate. * @return a composed predicate that represents the short-circuiting logical * OR of this predicate and the {@code other} predicate. * @see Predicate#or */ default KEY_PREDICATE or(final KEY_PREDICATE other) { return or((JDK_PRIMITIVE_PREDICATE) other); } #elif ! KEY_CLASS_Boolean /** {@inheritDoc} * @implNote Composing with a JDK type-specific predicate will be slightly less efficient than using a type-specific predicate, as the argument will have to be widened at each call. */ @Override default KEY_PREDICATE or(final JDK_PRIMITIVE_PREDICATE other) { return or(other instanceof KEY_PREDICATE ? (KEY_PREDICATE)other : (KEY_PREDICATE)other::test); } #endif /** {@inheritDoc} * @deprecated Please use the corresponding type-specific method instead. */ @Deprecated @Override default Predicate or(final Predicate other) { return Predicate.super.or(other); } }





© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy